
A unified academic catalogue for books, journal articles, book chapters, proceedings papers, conference abstracts and semiotic research materials.
A unified academic catalogue for books, journal articles, proceedings papers, collection articles and semiotic research materials. Search across the full database; results are shown with pagination.
Jonestown: A study in ethnographic discourse
In: Semiotica 1983, Issue 2024-02-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1983.46.2-4.167
Looking both ways: The ethnographer in the text
In: Semiotica 1983, Issue 2024-02-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1983.46.2-4.151
Questions for the ethnographer: A critical examination of the role of the interview in fieldwork
In: Semiotica 1983, Issue 2024-02-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1983.46.2-4.233
Signs in the field: Prospects and issues for semiotic ethnography
In: Semiotica 1983, Issue 2024-02-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1983.46.2-4.99
Some comments on the concept of the human sign: Visual and verbal components, and applications to ethnic research (A wonderful father)
In: Semiotica 1983, Issue 2024-02-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1983.46.2-4.263
Syntagmatic structures: How the Maoris make sense of history
In: Semiotica 1983, Issue 2024-02-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1983.46.2-4.287
The semiotics of reciprocity: A Moroccan interpretation
In: Semiotica 1983, Issue 2024-02-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1983.46.2-4.211
The taste of your own flesh
In: Semiotica 1983, Issue 2024-02-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1983.46.2-4.107
... the essential being of language cannot be anything linguistic — Martin Heidegger
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.135
Autobiographical textuality: The case of Thoreau’s Walden
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.257
C. S. Peirce’s phaneroscopy and semiotics
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.169
Cinders
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Annotation: Cinders is among Derrida's most remarkable and revealing of this distinguished author's many writings. While Derrida customarily devotes his powers of analysis to exacting readigs of texts from Plato to Aristotle and Freud to Heidegger, readers of Cinders will soon discover that Derrida is engaged in a poetic self-analysis.
Identifier: 0803216890
Status: Available
Edgework: Frame and boundary in the phenomenology of narrative communication
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.277
Experience, signification, and reality: The boundaries of cultural semiotics
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.73
Human nature: Of communication, of structuralism, of semiotics
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.25
Introduction: Two philosophies of communication
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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- 1-4
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.1
On the cognitive underpinnings of language
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.107
Palimpsestes
- Dependent title
- la littérature au second degré
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Annotation: Un palimpseste est litéralement, un parchemin dont on a gratté la première inscription pour lui en substituer une autre, mais où cette opération n'a pas irrémédiablement effacé le texte primitif, en sorte qu'on peut y liter l'ancien sous le nouveau, comme par transparence. Cet état de choses montre, au figuré, qu'un texte peut toujours en cacher un autre ,ais qu'il le dissimule rarement tout à fait, et qu'il se prête le plus souvent à ine double lecture où se superposent, au moins un hypertexte et son hypotexte - ainsi, dit-on l'Ulysse de Joyce et l'Odysée d'Homère. J'entends ici par hypertextes toutes les œvres dérivées d'une œvre antérieure, part transformation, comme dans la parodie, ou par imitation, comme dans le pastiche. Mais pastiche et parodie ne sont que les manifestations à la fois les plus visibles et les plus mineures de cette hypertextualité, out littérature au second degré, qui s'écrit en lisant, et dont la place et l'action dans le champ littéraire - et un peu au-delà - sont généralement, et fâcheusement, méconnunes. Jëntreprends ici d'explorer ce territoire. Un texte peut toujours en lire un autre, et ainsi de suite jusqu'à la fin des textes. Celui-ci n'échappe pas à la règle : il l'expose et s'y expose. Lira bien qui lira le dernier. A palimpsest is literally a parchment from which the first inscription has been scratched out to replace it with another, but where this operation has not irremediably erased the original text, so that the old can be read under the new, as if by transparency. This state of affairs shows, figuratively, that a text can always hide another, but that it rarely conceals it completely, and that it most often lends itself to a double reading where at least one hypertext and its hypotext are superimposed - thus, we say, Joyce's Ulysses and Homer's Odyssey. I mean here by hypertexts all works derived from an earlier work, by transformation, as in parody, or by imitation, as in pastiche. But pastiche and parody are only the most visible and minor manifestations of this hypertextuality, a literature of the second degree, which is written by reading, and whose place and action in the literary field - and a little beyond - are generally, and unfortunately, unknown. I undertake here to explore this territory. One text can always read another, and so on until the end of the texts. This one does not escape the rule: it exposes it and exposes itself to it. He who reads last, will read well. (translated with Google translate)
Identifier: 2020061163
Status: Available
Peirce and Hjelmslev: Man-as-sign/man-as-language
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.183
Phenomenology and deconstructive strategy
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.5
Semiotic phenomenology in Plato’s Sophist
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.221
Sonstiges
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.u
The concretization of meaning: Roman Ingarden
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.247
The economy of central Australian Aboriginal expression: An inspection from the vantage of Merleau-Ponty and Derrida
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.40.3-4.267
The phenomenology of verbal communication: A classical Indian view
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.207
Toward inhabited space: The semiotic structure of camera movement in the cinema
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.317
Vers la phénoménologie sémiotique
In: Semiotica 1982, Issue 2024-01-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1982.41.1-4.41
A visual and temporal decoding of the pragmatic structure of Jaques le fataliste
In: Semiotica 1981, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1981.36.3-4.273
Clouds, camels, chalk, and cheese
In: Semiotica 1981, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1981.36.3-4.365
Elements of symbolic history, Part l
In: Semiotica 1981, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1981.36.3-4.211
Phytosemiotics
In: Semiotica 1981, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1981.36.3-4.187
Review article
In: Semiotica 1981, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1981.36.3-4.309
The golden age of semiotics according to Miguel de Unamuno
In: Semiotica 1981, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1981.36.3-4.299
Decoding Middletown’s Easter bunny: A study in American iconography
In: Semiotica 1980, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1980.32.3-4.221
Introduction to the reading of Hegel
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Other title information: Lectures on the "phenomenology of spirit"
Annotation: During the years 1933-1939, the Marxist political philosopher Alexandre Kojeve brilliantly explicated – through a series of lectures – the philosophy of Hegel as it was developed in the "Phenomenology of Spirit". Based on the major work by Kojeve, this collection of lectures was chosen by Bloom to show the intensity of Kojeve's study and thought and the depth of his insight into Hegel's "Phenomenology of Spirit". More important, for Kojeve was above all a philosopher and not an ideologue, this profound and venturesome work of Hegel will expose the readers to the excitement of discovering a great mind in all its force and power. Alexandre Kojeve was born in Russia and educated in Berlin. After World War II he worked in the French Ministry of Economic Affairs as one of the chief planners for the Common Market while also continuing his philosophical pursuits.
Identifier: 9780801492037
Status: Available
Facial Emblems of ‘Right’ and ‘Wrong’: Topographical Analysis and Derivation of a Recognition Test
In: Semiotica 1979, Issue 2024-01-02 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1979.26.1-2.15
The Relationship Between Encoding-Decoding of Visual Nonverbal Emotional Cues
In: Semiotica 1979, Issue 2024-01-02 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1979.28.1-2.171
Communicative Patterns at French Marketplaces
In: Semiotica 1978, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1978.23.3-4.279
Measuring Some Semantic and Pragmatic Variables in the Speech of Two Men in Psychotherapy
In: Semiotica 1978, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1978.23.3-4.229
Representational Symbol Systems
In: Semiotica 1978, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1978.23.3-4.333
Review Article
In: Semiotica 1978, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1978.23.3-4.343
Spatial, Semantic, and Evolutionary Analysis of an Animal Signal: Inciting by Female Mallards
In: Semiotica 1978, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1978.23.3-4.193
The Carter Campaign in Retrospect: Decoding the Cartoons
In: Semiotica 1978, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1978.23.3-4.307
The Intrinsic Dynamics of the Syntax of the Visual Sign (in Reference to Representative and Abstract Art)
In: Semiotica 1978, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1978.23.3-4.303
Too Many, Too Few: Ritual Modes of Signification
In: Semiotica 1978, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1978.23.3-4.291
We Drank Wine, We Talked, and a Good Time Was Had By All
In: Semiotica 1978, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1978.23.3-4.243
Decoding Limericks: A Structuralist Approach
In: Semiotica 1977, Issue 2024-01-02 00:00:00
- Pages
- 1-12
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1977.19.1-2.1
Reversals and Recognitions: Peirce and Mukařovský on the Art of Conversation
In: Semiotica 1977, Issue 2024-03-04 00:00:00
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1977.19.3-4.281
A Componential Analysis of the Architectural Sign /Column/
In: Semiotica 1972, Issue 2
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/semi.1972.5.2.97
Russian Formalism
- Dependent title
- History-Doctrine
- Edition
- 4 edition
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Annotation: More elaborately and self-consciously than anywhere in the West, Russian criticism has developed three major schools. One of these looks for the essence of literature in its philosophical and religious ideas: writers like Berdjaev, mainly interested in an interpretation of Dostoevskij, see literature as a way of knowing the absolute. A second school is the social: literature is not only a mirror of society but an incitement to social thought and action. In its Marxist version, social criticism has become the official Soviet creed and is thus felt today as peculiarly representative of Russian criticism. But a third school, that of Formalism, is so far much less known and much less accessible in the West. It arose around 1914 and was suppressed around 1930. Russian Formalism keeps the work of art itself in the center of attention: it sharply emphasizes the difference between literature and life, it rejects the usual biographical, psychological, and sociological explanations of literature.
Identifier: 9027904502
Status: Available