Semiotics: A Short Introduction

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A short introduction in semiotics for media makers, originally taught at Stenden University, Leeuwarden

Transcript of Semiotics: A Short Introduction

S J O E R D - J E R O E N M O E N A N D A R ( U N I V E R S I T Y O F G R O N I N G E N )

Guest lecture semiotics

Communication?

Plaque on board of ASA’s Pioneer 10

Communication

sender message receiver

Communication is only possible when sender and receiver speak the same ‘language’

Learning to communicate is learning signs and their meanings

Meaning?

Gustave Doré,The Flood

Renault advertisement

The crash tests show it: the safest cars are manufactured in France

Message (“text”)

Encoding Decoding

Sender(Media companies)

Receiver(audiences)

Making meaning

Meaning

Denotation

Connotation

denotation/connotation

denotation/connotation

denotation/connotation

denotation/connotation

denotation/connotation

denotation/connotation

denotation / connotation

Semiotics

Study of signs

A different field from:

The study of the material aspects of signs (media studies)

The study of the aesthetic aspects of signs (aesthetics)

Semioticians study the relationship between signsand their meaning

A sign represents

Representation

= re-presentation: to make present that which is absent through the use of signs.

Produces meaning within and through a sign system

Sign

object

meaningsign

Semiotictriangle

Three possible relations sing-meaning

Symbolic relation

Indexical relation

Iconic relation

Symbolic relation sing-meaning

Relation is arbitrary (ie: not necessary)

Is created by conventions

Almost all words

Symbolic relation sign-meaning

In advertising

Indexical relation sign-meaning

Relation between sign and meaning is a matter of fact

Sign is a part of the meaning

Smoke-fire

Indexical relation sign-meaning

Is something really indexical?

Iconic relation sign-meaning

Relation because of similarity

Portrait, picture

But: how iconic is a picture really?

Also: A sign is often more or less iconic, indexical AND symbolic at the same time

Iconic?

square/curvy, man/woman?

Meaning

A sign has no meaning in itself

Meaning comes into being in relation to other signs

McSweeney’s Fine Sausages

Vegetarian restaurant The Happy Piglet

Sign relations

Syntactic relations between signs

Semantic relations between sign and meaning

Pragmatic relations between a sign and its use

“The ice is thin!”

Rammstein: Mein Land

Polysemy

A sign can have more than one meaning

There is no such thing as a private sign

Earlier use ‘sticks’ to a sign there is always a ‘dialogue’ going on between texts that use the samesign

“Discourse”

“Pig”

Circulation

Simon Williams,Alpine Review

(2008)

Intertextuality

Vertical intertextuality: direct comment

Film review

Top Gun (1986) in Sleep With Me (1994)

Horizontal intertextuality: ‘texts’ refer to each other, or recycle each other (often this means it’s a comment as well, but implicitly)

Intertextuality

“Strong” intertextuality (intentionally)

“Weak” intertextuality (necessarily)

“Strong” intertextuality

Simon Williams,Alpine Review

(2008)

“Weak” intertextuality

مونندر

Intertextuality

Quoting: an earlier text literally becomes a part of a new text (more recent term: “sampling”)

Referring: a text is referred to in another text

Intertextuality: rhyming images

Intertextuality: rhyming images

Intertextuality: rhyming images

Intertextuality: rhyming images

Semiotics

Questions?