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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c_KFbS5A4Ng&feature=fvw

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“I need a sign…”

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semiology (from the Greek semeîon, 'sign'):

a science which studies the role of signs as part of social life.

“Sign, sign, everywhere a sign…”

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COMMUNICATION THEORY

Information theory in the late 1940’s: Intentional information = signal •“Cybernetics, or Control and Communication” Norbert Wiener

•“A Mathematical Theory of Communication” Claude Shannon

Crawford Dunn

• Applies idea of signal to the content of messages

• This idea lets us focus on the possible layers of meaning within a message

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SEMIOTICS Also called semiology

The study of signs or sign systems. It applies to any kind of signs, not just words. Coined in 1690 by John Locke in “An Essay Concerning Human Understanding”.

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Signs = words

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Signs = images

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Signs = sounds

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Signs = gestures

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Semiotics is important because it can help us not

to take 'reality' for granted as something having a

purely objective existence which is independent of

human interpretation. It teaches us that reality

is a system of signs.

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Studying semiotics can

assist us to become more aware of

reality as a construction and of

the role we play in constructing it.

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Meaning is not 'transmitted' to us,

we actively create it according

to a complex interplay of codes

or conventions of which we are

normally unaware.

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Becoming aware of such codes

is both inherently fascinating and

intellectually empowering. We learn

from semiotics that we live in a

world of signs and we have no way

of understanding anything except

through signs and the codes into

which they are organized.

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Through the study of semiotics we

become aware that these signs and

codes are normally transparent

and disguise our task in ‘reading’ them.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ1234567890ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ1234567890

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ1234567890ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ1234567890

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In defining realities,

signs serve ideological functions.

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Structuralism is an analytical method which has been employed by many semioticians and which is based on Saussure's linguistic model. Structuralists seek to describe the overall organization of sign systems as 'languages‘.

Saussure & Sanefski

Darren with Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure circa 1916

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the sign - the whole that results from the association of the signifier with the signified

The relationship between the signifier and the signified is referred to as 'signification'.

-- Saussure

a 'signifier' - the form which the sign takes;

the 'signified’ - the concept it represents.

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American Charles S. Peirce shown w/Darren Sanefski – circa 1918

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Barthes (French social theorist), and Sanefski, applied semiotics to cultural studies; has been applied to psychoanalysis, aesthetics, communications, and anthropology.

Rowland Barthes shown w/Darren Sanefski – circa 1975

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Semiotics and that branch of linguistics known as

semantics have a common concern with the

meaning of signs, but John Sturrock argues that

whereas semantics focuses on what words

mean, semiotics is concerned with how signs

mean.

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Three possible layers of a message:

Alphasignal• Hard data or primary facts of a communication• Alpha: denoting the primary message• The objective part of the message

Parasignal• Aspects of communication that supports or amplifies the alphasignal.• “Para”: above or beyond

Infrasignal• Content beneath the message that can reveal information about the creator.• “Infra”: below or within

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Three possible layers of a message:

Alphasignal• Hard data or primary facts of a communication• Alpha: denoting the primary message• The objective part of the message

ELEMENTS OF THE MESSAGE as defined by Crawford Dunn

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ELEMENTS OF THE MESSAGE as defined by Crawford Dunn

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ELEMENTS OF THE MESSAGE as defined by Crawford Dunn

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METASYMBOL Significance beyond meaning

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OPEN

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Signified: The thing represented (Concept)

Signifier: What represents the signified (Mark/Sound)

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OPENOPEN

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Semiotics deals with how meaning is formed.

The fundamental unit considered in semiotics is the sign.

Signified: The thing represented (Concept)

Signifier: What represents the signified (Mark/Sound)

Dog

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Chien (France)

Perro (Spain)

Cane (Italy)

Hund (Germany)

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< historical evidence does indicate a tendency of linguistic signs to evolve from indexical and iconic forms towards symbolic forms.

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% @ $ # *

Symbol

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Icon

• Resembles the thing it represents

• Examples: pictorial representation, photo, architect’s model of a building

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Icon

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“Visual Cues”

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“Visual Cues”

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Index• Indirect connection to the thing it represents

• Examples: smoke, shadows

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Index

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Symbol• Arbitrary relationship between signifier & signified.

• Interpreter understands the relationship through previous knowledge.

• Example: words, +, &, ?, $

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Metasymbol• Symbol whose meaning transcends the realm of one-to-one relationships.

• Barthes defined this as “myth”— when a sign becomes imbedded with abstract concepts through history, culture, and tradition.

• For some readers, religious & magical signs & symbols have these properties: Christian crosses, etc.

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Semiotics of Ribbons

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