Semiotics unbounded: interpretive routes through the open network of signs
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Toronto [u.a.]
University of Toronto Press
2005
|
Schriftenreihe: | Toronto studies in semiotics and communication
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references: (p. [565]-612) and index |
Beschreibung: | xxv, 630 p. 24 cm |
ISBN: | 0802087655 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Semiotics unbounded |b interpretive routes through the open network of signs |c Susan Petrilli and Augusto Ponzio |
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adam_text | Semiotics Unbounded
Interpretive Routes through
the Open Network of Signs
Susan Petrilli and Augusto Ponzio
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS
Toronto Buffalo London
Contents
Preface xvii
Introduction: An Excursion into Semiotics 3
1 1 Two Meanings of Semiotics 3
1 2 Protagonist: The Sign 6
1 3 Stooge: The Interpretant 8
1 4 Pragmatism as Pragmaticism 10
1 5 The Verbal Sign s Influence on Semiotics 12
1 6 Signification and Significance 14
1 7 Signification and Denotatum 16
1 8 Beyond the Verbal Sign Paradigm 18
1 9 Subject and Alterity 19
1 10 Word and Dialogue 22
1 11 Dialogue and Inference 25
1 12 Inferences and Categories: Semiotics, Logic, Ontology 28
PART ONE: SEMIOTICS AND SEMIOTICIANS 33
1 An Itinerary: From Peirce to Others 35
1 1 Problems on Peirce s Desk 35
111 Semiosis, Interpretation, and the Quasi-Interpreter 35
112 Sign Displacement, Identity, and Otherness 38
113 Knowledge in the Gnoseological Sense, but also as
Responsible Awareness 40
114 Interpretation and Representation 41
115 The General Character of Peirce s Sign Model 45
viii Contents
1 2 More Problems in Focus: Subjects, Bodies, and Signs 47
121 The Dialogic Self 47
122 Personal Identity and the Doctrine of Synechism 50
123 Consciousness, Body, World • 52
124 Private Worlds and Public Worlds 57
125 Habit and the Play of Musement 58
1 3 Neglected but Foiindational Aspects of Peirce s Semiotics 59
131 Three Evolutionary Modes in the Cosmos 60
132 Axiological Problems as Semiotic Problems 62
133 Love and Logic 64
134 Agapic Comprehension and Welby s Mother-Sense 70
135 Looking from Peirce s Perspective 74
Biographical Note 79
2 About Welby 80
2 1 Why Signifies ? A Contribution to Theory of Meaning,
and More 80
211A Lady Significian 81
212 Three Levels of Meaning 83
213 Significance, Translation, Interpretation 87
214A Method in Mental Exercise 88
215 Critique of Plain Meaning 90
2 2 Departure: Exegesis and Holy Scripture 90
221 The Problem of Meaning and Interpretation of the
Holy Scriptures 91
222 For a Dialogue between Religion and Science,
a Question of Method 92
223 Light, Love, and Progress in Knowledge 95
224 From Exegesis to the Translative Method 99
2 3 Reading Signifies as Biosensifics 102
231 Sense and Its Organic Basis 102
232 The Plasticity of Language and Evolutionary
Developmen t of Consciousness 105
233 Signs and Evolution of Life: A Research Program 109
234 Organism and Environment in Cultural Evolution 118
235 The Biological Basis of Signifying Processes 123
Biographical Note 134
3 About Bakhtin 138
3 1 Philosophy of Language as Critique of Dialogic Reason 138
Contents ix
311 Philosophy of Literature and Philosophy of Language 138
312 Semiotics and Philosophy of Language 140
313 Bakhtin s Sign Model 141
314 Bakhtinian Dialogue 144
315 Bakhtinian Dialogism and Biosemiotics 148
316 For a Critique of Dialogic Reason 151
3 2 An Interdisciplinary Perspective and Detotalizing Method 153
321 From the Boundaries of Art Criticism 154
322 Signs and Signals 157
323 On Ideology 158
324 The Unconscious and Ideology 159
325 The Question of Values 162
326A Dialogic Method 165
Biographical Note 166
4 About Morris 167
4 1 Behaviouristic Semiotics and Pragmaticist Semiotics 167
411 Sidelights 167
412 Morris and Peirce 169
413 Returning to Peirce 171
414 From Scientific Empiricism Onward 172
415 Morris s Behaviouristics 173
4 2 Semiotics and Biology 176
421 Criteria, not Definitions 176
422 Biological Terminology to Talk about Signs 179
423 Biology and Symbolism at the Origin of Morris s
Research 181
424 Behaviour Involving Symbols 182
425 General Linguistic Symbols and Verbal Linguistic
Symbols 184
4 3 Sign, Dimensions of Semiosis, Denotatum, and Language 186
431 The Most Recalcitrant Term: Sign 186
432 Misunderstandings over the Dimensions of Semiosis 191
433 Designatum and Denotatum 193
434 Language and General Linguistics 195
435 Human and Non-Human Signs 200
Biographical Notes 201
5 About Sebeok 203
5 1 Modelling Systems Theory and Global Semiotics 203
x Contents
511 Semiosic Phenomena as Modelling Processes 203
512 Critique of the Pars Pro Toto Error 205
513 Semiosic Boundaries 206
514 Sebeok s Semiosic Universe 208
515 Global Semiotics 209
5 2 Semiotics and Semiosis 211
521 Three Aspects of the Unifying Function of
Semiotics 211
522 Semiosis and Semiotics: Semiotics, Another
Meaning 213
523 To Live and to Lie 214
524 Origin of Language and Speech 215
525 Iconicity and Language 216
5 3 Sebeok s Works and the Destiny of Semiosis 218
531A Tetralogy 218
532 Semiotics as a Doctrine of Signs and Metasemiosis 219
533 From the Non-Human Interpreter Sign to the
Human Interpreter Verb 220
534 European and American Semiotics: A Dialogue 221
535 The Destiny of Semiosis after Life 222
5 4 Sebeok s Semiotics and Education 223
541 The Role of Signs in the Educational Process 223
542 Implications of Sebeok s Work for Education 224
543 Education to Mutual Adjustment of Language
and Speech 226
544 Semiotics and Foresight of Proximal Development 227
545 Global Semiotics and Education to Responsibility
for Life 229
Biographical Notes 230
6 About Rossi-Landi 232
6 1 Rossi-Landi s Philosophy of Language 233
611 His Semiotic Studies 233
612 Common Speech Theory 235
613 Language as the A Priori 241
614 Language as Work and Trade 245
615 Language as a Human Prerogative 248
616 Linguistic Work and Linguistic Use 250
617 On the Homology between Verbal and Non-Verbal
Human Communication 251
Contents xi
618 Ideology and Linguistic Alienation 254
619 Social Reproduction 255
6 2 On the Tracks of a Multiform Research Itinerary 256
621 From Common Speech to Common Semiosis 256
622 For a Homological Method 259
623 Morris in Rossi-Landi s Interpretation 260
624 The Correspondence between Morris and
Rossi-Landi • 264
625 On Sign and Non-Sign Materiality 268
6 3 Communication, Mass Media, and Critique of Ideology 269
631 The Homination Process in Relation to Linguistic
and Non-Linguistic Production 269
632 For a Critique of Linguistic and Ideological -
Alienation in a Semiotical Key 271
633 Social Planning and Multimedial Communication 276
634 Cultural Capital and Social Alienation 279
635 The Role of Signs in Neocapitalist Society 281
6 4 Rossi-Landi between Ideologic and Scienze Umane 283
641 Doctrine of Ideologies and Semiotics of Social
Communication Programs 283
642 The Pars Pro Toto Fallacy 286
643 Ideology and False Consciousness 288
644 Semiotics and Critique of die Humanities 291
645 Research and Disalienating Praxis 292
646 The New Concept of Work in Neocapitalist Society 294
647 Furdier Developments in Rossi-Landi s Meditations
on Ideology 295
Biographical Note 297
7 About Eco 298
7 1 From Decodification to Interpretation 299
711 Eco s Contribution to the Transition from
Decodification Semiotics to Interpretation
Semiotics in Italy 299
712 Peirce in Italy 304
713 Aporias in the Effort to Solve the Opposition
between Communication and Signification 310
714 Meaning and Referent: Aporias in the Effort to
Solve the Opposition between Referentialism and
Non-Referentialism in Semiotics 314
xii Contents
715 Sign Production and Ideology 320
716 Extending die Boundaries of Semiotics 322
7 2 Interpretation and Responsive Understanding 324
721 On Sign Models between Semiotics and Philosophy
of Language 324
722 Interpretation and Dialogism in the Study of Signs 329
Biographical Note 340
PART TWO: MODELLING, WRITING, AND OTHERNESS 341
8 Modelling and Otherness 343
8 1 Modelling, Communication, and Dialogism 343
811 Model and Modelling 343
812 Reformulating Thure von Uexkull s Typology
of Semiosis 344
813 From Substitution to Interpretation 345
814 Centrality of die Interpretant in the
Semiosic Matrix 347
815 The Dialogic Nature of Sign and Semiosis 349
816 Dialogue and the Functional Cycle 350
817 Dialogism and Biosemiosis 352
818 The Biological Basis of Bakhtinian Dialogue and
the Great Experience • 353
819 Rabelais s World as the World s Biosemiotic
Consciousness 354
8 2 Identity, Odierness, and Primal Sense as a Modelling Device 356
821 Primal Sense or Mother-Sense 356
822 Primal Sense, Modelling, and Creativity 358
823 Primal Sense, Odierness, and Criticism 364
824 Identity, Primal Sense, and die Logic of Love 366
825 Ident* as Odierness, Intercorporeity, and Dialogism 369
8 3 Writing as a Modelling Device 372
831 Writing and Transcription 372
832 Writing and Language 374
833 Literary Writing and die Creativity of Language 375
9 Writing and Dialogue 377
9 1 Dialogue, Otherness, and Writing 377
911 Dialogue 377
Contents xiii
912 Otherness, Dialogue, Intercorporeity 380
913 Dialogism, Otherness, and Signs 384
914 Writing 388
915 Orality, Writing, and Otherness 390
9 2 Dialogue and Carnivalized Writing 396
921 Different Degrees of Dialogism 396
922 The Time of Festivity and the Great Time
of Writing 397
923 The Carnivalesque in Writing 398
924 Writing in die Bakhtinian Perspective 399
9 3 Dialogue and Polyphony in the Writing of Novels
and Drama 400
931 Representation and Depiction 400
932 The Author s Word and Polyphony in die Novel 403
933 Dialogue and die Body 406
934 Dramatization and Polyphony in the Word of
Novel and Drama 411
9 4 Storytelling in the Era of Global Communication:
Black Writing - Oraliture 415
941 Two Different Types of Communication 415
942 Oraliture and Writing 417
943 Texts That Are Distant From Each Other 418
944 Brer Rabbit Stories 421
945 The Novel and die Genres of African Oral
Literature 424
Biographical Note 428
PART THREE: PREDICATIVE JUDGMENT, ARGUMENTATION,
AND COMMUNICATION 429
10 Understanding and Misunderstanding 431
10 1 Semiogenealogy of Predicative Judgment 431
10 1 1 Semiotics as Constitutive Phenomenology 431
10 1 2 Four Different Aspects of die Phenomenology
of the Object 434
10 1 3 Semiotics as Transcendental Logic:
The Question of the Ground 437
10 1 4 Similarity, die Ground, and die Immediate
Object 440
xiv Contents
10 1 5 Similarity and the Image 442
10 1 6 Genesis of Predicative Judgment 445
10 1 7 Metalinguistics and the Precategorial Level 449
10 1 8 The I-do 451
10 1 9 As if and Predication as Acting 455
10 2 Objective Misunderstanding and Mystifications of
Language 458
10 2 1 The Maladies of Language 458
10 2 2 Ambiguity, Precision, and die Panacea
of Definition 459
10 2 3 Equivocation and Figurative Language 463
10 2 4 The Fallacy of Invariable Plain, Obvious,
Common Sense Meaning 466
10 2 5 The Fallacy of Universal Language : Common
Speech 469
10 2 6 Critical Commonsensism and Pragmaticism 471
10 2 7 Generality and Vagueness 473
11 Closed Community and Open Community in Global
Communication 478
11 1 Logic, Argumentation and Dialogue in Global
Communication 478
11 1 1 Critique of die Reason of Global
Communication 478
11 1 2 Dialogue, Theory of Semiosis, and Theory
of Argumentation 480
11 1 3 Signs of Rhetorical Tricks 484
11 1 4 For a Critique of Television Communication
in a Semiotical Key 486
11 1 5 Dialogue and Lying 489
11 1 6 Television and Keeping a Good Conscience 490
11 2 Argumentative Logic at die Helsinki Conference
and Communication-Production Ideology 491
11 2 1 Communication-Production and War 491
11 22A Semiotic Analysis of die Helsinki Final Act 494
11 2 3 Argumentative Loci and Weak Points in die
Helsinki Final Act 494
11 2 4 Nation as Identity and as Difference 496
11 2 5 Mutual Recognition Based on Convention
and Assimilating the Odier 498
Contents xv
11 26A Third Way of Understanding die Relations
among Nation-States 499
11 3 The Sign Machine: Linguistic Work and Global
Communication 502
11 3 1 Semiosis, Communication, and Machines 503
11 32A Machine Capable of Semiotics 505
11 3 3 Human-Machine Interactivity 507
11 3 4 Human Intelligence as a Resource 508
11 3 5 The Intelligent Machine, Linguistic Work,
and die Work Market 511
11 3 6 Language, Modelling, Alterity, and die Open
Community 515
11 4 Odierness and Communication: From die Closed
Community to die Open Community 517
11 41A Narrow Concept of Communication 517
11 4 2 Being and Communication 518
11 4 3 Persistence in Communication-Production
as Persistence in die Same Social System 520
11 4 4 Ontology of Communication-Being 521
11 4 5 Communication and Language 523
11 4 6 The Communication-Ontology Relation in
Today s Global Communication-Production
System 525
11 4 7 Beyond die Being of Communication 527
11 4 8 Sociality as Closed Community and Indifferent
Labour 528
11 4 9 Communion, or Sociality Regulated by
Otherness 531
Biographical Notes 533
12 Global Communication, Biosemiotics, and Semioethics 535
12 1 Semioediics, Community, and Odierness 535
12 1 1 Global Communication and Global Semiotics 536
12 1 2 Responsibility and Semioediics 538
12 1 3 Identity and Alterity: On Subjectivity and
Reasonableness 540
12 1 4 Signs of Humanity and Humanity of Signs 545
12 1 5 Semiotics as an Attitude and die Critical Work
of Semioediics 549
12 2 Bioediics, Semiotics of Life, and Global Communication 550
xvi Contents
12 2 1 Bioediics and Global Semiotics 550
12 2 2 Being and Sign: A Foundational and Critical
Approach to Bioediics 552
12 2 3 Bioethics and Global Communication 554
Glossary 559
Bibliography 565
Index 613
|
adam_txt |
Semiotics Unbounded
Interpretive Routes through
the Open Network of Signs
Susan Petrilli and Augusto Ponzio
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS
Toronto Buffalo London
Contents
Preface xvii
Introduction: An Excursion into Semiotics 3
1 1 Two Meanings of Semiotics 3
1 2 Protagonist: The Sign 6
1 3 Stooge: The Interpretant 8
1 4 Pragmatism as Pragmaticism 10
1 5 The Verbal Sign's Influence on Semiotics 12
1 6 Signification and Significance 14
1 7 Signification and Denotatum 16
1 8 Beyond the Verbal Sign Paradigm 18
1 9 Subject and Alterity 19
1 10 Word and Dialogue 22
1 11 Dialogue and Inference 25
1 12 Inferences and Categories: Semiotics, Logic, Ontology 28
PART ONE: SEMIOTICS AND SEMIOTICIANS 33
1 An Itinerary: From Peirce to Others 35
1 1 Problems on Peirce's Desk 35
111 Semiosis, Interpretation, and the Quasi-Interpreter 35
112 Sign Displacement, Identity, and Otherness 38
113 Knowledge in the Gnoseological Sense, but also as
Responsible Awareness 40
114 Interpretation and Representation 41
115 The General Character of Peirce's Sign Model 45
viii Contents
1 2 More Problems in Focus: Subjects, Bodies, and Signs 47
121 The Dialogic Self 47
122 Personal Identity and the Doctrine of Synechism 50
123 Consciousness, Body, World • 52
124 Private Worlds and Public Worlds 57
125 Habit and the Play of Musement 58
1 3 Neglected but Foiindational Aspects of Peirce's Semiotics 59
131 Three Evolutionary Modes in the Cosmos 60
132 Axiological Problems as Semiotic Problems 62
133 Love and Logic 64
134 Agapic Comprehension and Welby's Mother-Sense 70
135 Looking from Peirce's Perspective 74
Biographical Note 79
2 About Welby 80
2 1 Why 'Signifies'? A Contribution to Theory of Meaning,
and More 80
211A Lady Significian 81
212 Three Levels of Meaning 83
213 Significance, Translation, Interpretation 87
214A Method in Mental Exercise 88
215 Critique of'Plain Meaning' 90
2 2 Departure: Exegesis and Holy Scripture 90
221 The Problem of Meaning and Interpretation of the
Holy Scriptures 91
222 For a Dialogue between Religion and Science,
a Question of Method ' 92
223 Light, Love, and Progress in Knowledge 95
224 From Exegesis to the Translative Method 99
2 3 Reading Signifies as 'Biosensifics' 102
231 Sense and Its Organic Basis 102
232 The Plasticity of Language and Evolutionary
Developmen t of Consciousness 105
233 Signs and Evolution of Life: A Research Program 109
234 Organism and Environment in Cultural Evolution 118
235 The Biological Basis of Signifying Processes 123
Biographical Note 134
3 About Bakhtin 138
3 1 Philosophy of Language as Critique of Dialogic Reason 138
Contents ix
311 Philosophy of Literature and Philosophy of Language 138
312 Semiotics and Philosophy of Language 140
313 Bakhtin's Sign Model 141
314 Bakhtinian Dialogue 144
315 Bakhtinian Dialogism and Biosemiotics 148
316 For a Critique of Dialogic Reason 151
3 2 An Interdisciplinary Perspective and Detotalizing Method 153
321 From the Boundaries of Art Criticism 154
322 Signs and Signals 157
323 On Ideology 158
324 The Unconscious and Ideology 159
325 The Question of Values 162
326A Dialogic Method 165
Biographical Note 166
4 About Morris 167
4 1 Behaviouristic Semiotics and Pragmaticist Semiotics 167
411 Sidelights 167
412 Morris and Peirce 169
413 Returning to Peirce 171
414 From Scientific Empiricism Onward 172
415 Morris's Behaviouristics 173
4 2 Semiotics and Biology 176
421 Criteria, not Definitions 176
422 Biological Terminology to Talk about Signs 179
423 Biology and Symbolism at the Origin of Morris's
Research 181
424 Behaviour Involving Symbols 182
425 General Linguistic Symbols and Verbal Linguistic
Symbols 184
4 3 Sign, Dimensions of Semiosis, Denotatum, and Language 186
431 The Most Recalcitrant Term: Sign 186
432 Misunderstandings over the Dimensions of Semiosis 191
433 Designatum and Denotatum 193
434 Language and General Linguistics 195
435 Human and Non-Human Signs 200
Biographical Notes 201
5 About Sebeok 203
5 1 Modelling Systems Theory and Global Semiotics 203
x Contents
511 Semiosic Phenomena as Modelling Processes 203
512 Critique of the Pars Pro Toto Error 205
513 Semiosic Boundaries 206
514 Sebeok's Semiosic Universe 208
515 Global Semiotics 209
5 2 Semiotics and Semiosis 211
521 Three Aspects of the Unifying Function of
Semiotics 211
522 Semiosis and Semiotics: 'Semiotics,' Another
Meaning 213
523 To Live and to Lie 214
524 Origin of Language and Speech 215
525 Iconicity and Language 216
5 3 Sebeok's Works and the Destiny of Semiosis 218
531A Tetralogy 218
532 Semiotics as a Doctrine of Signs and Metasemiosis 219
533 From the Non-Human Interpreter Sign to the
Human Interpreter Verb 220
534 European and American Semiotics: A Dialogue 221
535 The Destiny of Semiosis after Life 222
5 4 Sebeok's Semiotics and Education 223
541 The Role of Signs in the Educational Process 223
542 Implications of Sebeok's Work for Education 224
543 Education to Mutual Adjustment of Language
and Speech 226
544 Semiotics and Foresight of 'Proximal Development' 227
545 Global Semiotics and Education to Responsibility
for Life 229
Biographical Notes 230
6 About Rossi-Landi 232
6 1 Rossi-Landi's Philosophy of Language 233
611 His Semiotic Studies 233
612 Common Speech Theory 235
613 Language as the A Priori 241
614 Language as Work and Trade 245
615 Language as a Human Prerogative 248
616 Linguistic Work and Linguistic Use 250
617 On the Homology between Verbal and Non-Verbal
Human Communication 251
Contents xi
618 Ideology and Linguistic Alienation 254
619 Social Reproduction 255
6 2 On the Tracks of a Multiform Research Itinerary 256
621 From Common Speech to Common Semiosis 256
622 For a'Homological Method' 259
623 Morris in Rossi-Landi's Interpretation 260
624 The Correspondence between Morris and
Rossi-Landi • 264
625 On Sign and Non-Sign Materiality 268
6 3 Communication, Mass Media, and Critique of Ideology 269
631 The Homination Process in Relation to Linguistic
and Non-Linguistic Production 269
632 For a Critique of Linguistic and Ideological -
Alienation in a Semiotical Key 271
633 Social Planning and Multimedial Communication 276
634 Cultural Capital and Social Alienation 279
635 The Role of Signs in Neocapitalist Society 281
6 4 Rossi-Landi between 'Ideologic' and 'Scienze Umane' 283
641 Doctrine of Ideologies and Semiotics of Social
Communication Programs 283
642 The Pars Pro Toto Fallacy 286
643 Ideology and False Consciousness 288
644 Semiotics and Critique of die Humanities 291
645 Research and Disalienating Praxis 292
646 The New Concept of Work in Neocapitalist Society 294
647 Furdier Developments in Rossi-Landi's Meditations
on Ideology 295
Biographical Note 297
7 About Eco 298
7 1 From Decodification to Interpretation 299
711 Eco's Contribution to the Transition from
Decodification Semiotics to Interpretation
Semiotics in Italy 299
712 Peirce in Italy 304
713 Aporias in the Effort to Solve the Opposition
between Communication and Signification 310
714 Meaning and Referent: Aporias in the Effort to
Solve the Opposition between Referentialism and
Non-Referentialism in Semiotics 314
xii Contents
715 Sign Production and Ideology 320
716 Extending die Boundaries of Semiotics 322
7 2 Interpretation and Responsive Understanding 324
721 On Sign Models between Semiotics and Philosophy
of Language 324
722 Interpretation and Dialogism in the Study of Signs 329
Biographical Note 340
PART TWO: MODELLING, WRITING, AND OTHERNESS 341
8 Modelling and Otherness 343
8 1 Modelling, Communication, and Dialogism 343
811 Model and Modelling 343
812 Reformulating Thure von Uexkull's Typology
of Semiosis 344
813 From 'Substitution' to 'Interpretation' 345
814 Centrality of die Interpretant in the
'Semiosic Matrix' 347
815 The Dialogic Nature of Sign and Semiosis 349
816 Dialogue and the 'Functional Cycle' 350
817 Dialogism and Biosemiosis 352
818 The Biological Basis of Bakhtinian Dialogue and
the 'Great Experience' • 353
819 Rabelais's World as the World's Biosemiotic
Consciousness 354
8 2 Identity, Odierness, and Primal Sense as a Modelling Device 356
821 Primal Sense or Mother-Sense 356
822 Primal Sense, Modelling, and Creativity 358
823 Primal Sense, Odierness, and Criticism 364
824 Identity, Primal Sense, and die Logic of Love 366
825 'Ident* as Odierness, Intercorporeity, and Dialogism 369
8 3 Writing as a Modelling Device 372
831 Writing and Transcription 372
832 Writing and Language 374
833 Literary Writing and die Creativity of Language 375
9 Writing and Dialogue 377
9 1 Dialogue, Otherness, and Writing 377
911 Dialogue 377
Contents xiii
912 Otherness, Dialogue, Intercorporeity 380
913 Dialogism, Otherness, and Signs 384
914 Writing 388
915 Orality, Writing, and Otherness 390
9 2 Dialogue and Carnivalized Writing 396
921 Different Degrees of Dialogism 396
922 The 'Time of Festivity' and the 'Great Time'
of Writing 397
923 The Carnivalesque in Writing 398
924 Writing in die Bakhtinian Perspective 399
9 3 Dialogue and Polyphony in the Writing of Novels
and Drama 400
931 Representation and Depiction 400
932 The Author's Word and Polyphony in die Novel 403
933 Dialogue and die Body 406
934 Dramatization and Polyphony in the Word of
Novel and Drama 411
9 4 Storytelling in the Era of Global Communication:
Black Writing - Oraliture 415
941 Two Different Types of Communication 415
942 'Oraliture' and Writing 417
943 Texts That Are Distant From Each Other 418
944 Brer Rabbit Stories 421
945 The Novel and die Genres of African Oral
Literature 424
Biographical Note 428
PART THREE: PREDICATIVE JUDGMENT, ARGUMENTATION,
AND COMMUNICATION 429
10 Understanding and Misunderstanding 431
10 1 Semiogenealogy of Predicative Judgment 431
10 1 1 Semiotics as Constitutive Phenomenology 431
10 1 2 Four Different Aspects of die Phenomenology
of the Object 434
10 1 3 Semiotics as Transcendental Logic:
The Question of the Ground 437
10 1 4 Similarity, die Ground, and die Immediate
Object 440
xiv Contents
10 1 5 Similarity and the Image 442
10 1 6 Genesis of Predicative Judgment 445
10 1 7 Metalinguistics and the Precategorial Level 449
10 1 8 The'I-do' 451
10 1 9 'As if and Predication as Acting 455
10 2 Objective Misunderstanding and Mystifications of
Language 458
10 2 1 The'Maladies of Language' 458
10 2 2 Ambiguity, 'Precision,' and die 'Panacea
of Definition' 459
10 2 3 Equivocation and Figurative Language 463
10 2 4 The Fallacy of Invariable 'Plain, Obvious,
Common Sense Meaning' 466
10 2 5 The Fallacy of'Universal Language': Common
Speech 469
10 2 6 Critical Commonsensism and Pragmaticism 471
10 2 7 Generality and Vagueness 473
11 Closed Community and Open Community in Global
Communication 478
11 1 Logic, Argumentation and Dialogue in Global
Communication 478
11 1 1 Critique of die Reason of Global
Communication 478
11 1 2 Dialogue, Theory of Semiosis, and Theory
of Argumentation 480
11 1 3 Signs of Rhetorical Tricks 484
11 1 4 For a Critique of Television Communication
in a Semiotical Key 486
11 1 5 Dialogue and Lying 489
11 1 6 Television and Keeping a Good Conscience 490
11 2 Argumentative Logic at die Helsinki Conference
and Communication-Production Ideology 491
11 2 1 Communication-Production and War 491
11 22A Semiotic Analysis of die Helsinki Final Act 494
11 2 3 Argumentative Loci and Weak Points in die
Helsinki Final Act 494
11 2 4 'Nation'as Identity and as Difference 496
11 2 5 Mutual Recognition Based on Convention
and Assimilating the Odier 498
Contents xv
11 26A Third Way of Understanding die Relations
among Nation-States 499
11 3 The Sign Machine: Linguistic Work and Global
Communication 502
11 3 1 Semiosis, Communication, and Machines 503
11 32A Machine Capable of Semiotics 505
11 3 3 Human-Machine Interactivity 507
11 3 4 Human Intelligence as a Resource 508
11 3 5 The Intelligent Machine, Linguistic Work,
and die Work Market 511
11 3 6 Language, Modelling, Alterity, and die Open
Community 515
11 4 Odierness and Communication: From die Closed
Community to die Open Community 517
11 41A Narrow Concept of Communication 517
11 4 2 Being and Communication 518
11 4 3 Persistence in Communication-Production
as Persistence in die Same Social System 520
11 4 4 Ontology of Communication-Being 521
11 4 5 Communication and Language 523
11 4 6 The Communication-Ontology Relation in
Today's Global Communication-Production
System 525
11 4 7 Beyond die Being of Communication 527
11 4 8 Sociality as Closed Community and Indifferent
Labour 528
11 4 9 Communion, or Sociality Regulated by
Otherness 531
Biographical Notes 533
12 Global Communication, Biosemiotics, and Semioethics 535
12 1 Semioediics, Community, and Odierness 535
12 1 1 Global Communication and Global Semiotics 536
12 1 2 Responsibility and Semioediics 538
12 1 3 Identity and Alterity: On Subjectivity and
Reasonableness 540
12 1 4 Signs of Humanity and Humanity of Signs 545
12 1 5 Semiotics as an Attitude and die Critical Work
of Semioediics 549
12 2 Bioediics, Semiotics of Life, and Global Communication 550
xvi Contents
12 2 1 Bioediics and Global Semiotics 550
12 2 2 Being and Sign: A Foundational and Critical
Approach to Bioediics 552
12 2 3 Bioethics and Global Communication 554
Glossary 559
Bibliography 565
Index 613 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Petrilli, Susan 1954- Ponzio, Augusto 1942- |
author_GND | (DE-588)131965271 (DE-588)131966189 |
author_facet | Petrilli, Susan 1954- Ponzio, Augusto 1942- |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Petrilli, Susan 1954- |
author_variant | s p sp a p ap |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV021693619 |
callnumber-first | P - Language and Literature |
callnumber-label | P99 |
callnumber-raw | P99 |
callnumber-search | P99 |
callnumber-sort | P 299 |
callnumber-subject | P - Philology and Linguistics |
classification_rvk | CC 4800 ER 730 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)56319279 (DE-599)BVBBV021693619 |
dewey-full | 302.2 121/.68 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences 100 - Philosophy & psychology |
dewey-ones | 302 - Social interaction 121 - Epistemology (Theory of knowledge) |
dewey-raw | 302.2 121/.68 |
dewey-search | 302.2 121/.68 |
dewey-sort | 3302.2 |
dewey-tens | 300 - Social sciences 120 - Epistemology, causation, humankind |
discipline | Sprachwissenschaft Soziologie Philosophie Literaturwissenschaft |
discipline_str_mv | Sprachwissenschaft Soziologie Philosophie Literaturwissenschaft |
format | Book |
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illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T15:15:14Z |
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institution | BVB |
isbn | 0802087655 |
language | English |
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spelling | Petrilli, Susan 1954- Verfasser (DE-588)131965271 aut Semiotics unbounded interpretive routes through the open network of signs Susan Petrilli and Augusto Ponzio Toronto [u.a.] University of Toronto Press 2005 xxv, 630 p. 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Toronto studies in semiotics and communication Includes bibliographical references: (p. [565]-612) and index Langage et langues - Philosophie Sémiotique Sémiotique - Recherche Philosophie Semiotics Semiotics Research Language Philosophy Sémiotique Recherche Langage et langues Philosophie Semiotik (DE-588)4054498-9 gnd rswk-swf Semiotik (DE-588)4054498-9 s DE-604 Ponzio, Augusto 1942- Verfasser (DE-588)131966189 aut HEBIS Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014907654&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Petrilli, Susan 1954- Ponzio, Augusto 1942- Semiotics unbounded interpretive routes through the open network of signs Langage et langues - Philosophie Sémiotique Sémiotique - Recherche Philosophie Semiotics Semiotics Research Language Philosophy Sémiotique Recherche Langage et langues Philosophie Semiotik (DE-588)4054498-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4054498-9 |
title | Semiotics unbounded interpretive routes through the open network of signs |
title_auth | Semiotics unbounded interpretive routes through the open network of signs |
title_exact_search | Semiotics unbounded interpretive routes through the open network of signs |
title_exact_search_txtP | Semiotics unbounded interpretive routes through the open network of signs |
title_full | Semiotics unbounded interpretive routes through the open network of signs Susan Petrilli and Augusto Ponzio |
title_fullStr | Semiotics unbounded interpretive routes through the open network of signs Susan Petrilli and Augusto Ponzio |
title_full_unstemmed | Semiotics unbounded interpretive routes through the open network of signs Susan Petrilli and Augusto Ponzio |
title_short | Semiotics unbounded |
title_sort | semiotics unbounded interpretive routes through the open network of signs |
title_sub | interpretive routes through the open network of signs |
topic | Langage et langues - Philosophie Sémiotique Sémiotique - Recherche Philosophie Semiotics Semiotics Research Language Philosophy Sémiotique Recherche Langage et langues Philosophie Semiotik (DE-588)4054498-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Langage et langues - Philosophie Sémiotique Sémiotique - Recherche Philosophie Semiotics Semiotics Research Language Philosophy Sémiotique Recherche Langage et langues Philosophie Semiotik |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014907654&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT petrillisusan semioticsunboundedinterpretiveroutesthroughtheopennetworkofsigns AT ponzioaugusto semioticsunboundedinterpretiveroutesthroughtheopennetworkofsigns |