
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.
Language of Life
- Dependent title
- A Peircean Approach to Living Organisms
- Edition
- 1 edition
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Notes: general editor of the series Elize Bisanz
Annotation: In this book, Peirce’s logical apparatus is used to explain some topics in biology where traditional scientific methods fail to establish the relation between the real and the virtual in the genetic script, the irreducibility of evolution to the genome, and the multidimensionality of the passage from genotype to phenotype. The interdisciplinary nature of this study consists in combining Peirce’s triadic logic, linguistics and biology; the author, as a linguist, draws out similarities between sentence construction and protein folding. Three main branches from the biological sciences are focused on: evolution, epigenetics and protein folding. The volume applies Peirce’s logical tools to demonstrate the universal validity of his scientific method in the current research.
Identifier: 9783631925935
Status: Available
Die Infragestellung des Leibes durch Technik: Plädoyer für eine Reformulierung des Körperbegriffs
In: Zeitschrift für Semiotik 2023, Volume 45, Issue 3-4: Selbstoptimierung
- Pages
- 83-106
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Identifier: https://doi.org/10.14464/zsem.v45i3-4.861
Körperoptimierung und Leibgebundenheit: Kulturelle und psychische Bedeutungen permanenter Grenzüberschreitung
In: Zeitschrift für Semiotik 2023, Volume 45, Issue 3-4: Selbstoptimierung
- Pages
- 161-174
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Identifier: https://doi.org/10.14464/zsem.v45i3-4.864
Cognitive Semiotics
In: Zeitschrift für Semiotik 2022, Volume 44, Issue 3-4: Italian Semiotics II
- Pages
- 157-182
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Identifier: https://doi.org/10.14464/zsem.v44i3-4.853
Speaking one’s mind: the sign as subject of interpretation in the manuscripts of Charles S. Peirce, between the theories of rhetoric and communication
In: Semiotica 2022, Issue 245
- Pages
- 79-98
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2020-0086
A. J. Greimas in the world: travels, translations, transmissions
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 187-228
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2020-0040
An experimental study on the effect of emotion lines in comics
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 305-324
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2019-0079
Analyse sémiotique de l’index de livre : Étude de la construction complexe et unique d’un paratexte
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 229-279
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2018-0036
Consciousness and mind in Peirce: distinctions and complementarities
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 105-128
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2021-0118
Hotspots for textual dynamics: cultural semiotic approach to digital archives
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 387-407
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2019-0001
How Saussure is misinterpreted in Cognitive Grammar
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 239
- Pages
- 243-264
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2018-0102
Kubrick’s audible bodies: unseen subjectivities in <i>2001</i> and <i>The Shining</i>
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 281-303
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2020-0105
On the bottomless lake of firstness: conjectures on the synthetic power of consciousness
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 129-152
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2021-0120
Peirce’s legacy for contemporary consciousness studies, the emergence of consciousness from qualia, and its evanescence in habits
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 49-103
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2021-0117
Peirce’s vocation for consciousness: an evolutionary account
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 1-10
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2021-0123
Review of Conspiracy theories as a form of phatic communication
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 409-414
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2021-0007
Semiotic analysis of symbolic logic using tagmemic theory: with implications for analytic philosophy
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 171-186
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2020-0018
Surviving a natural disaster as a semiotic reformation of the self and worldview
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 353-386
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2018-0130
The element of surprise in Peirce’s double consciousness paradigm
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 11-47
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2021-0122
Toward a Peircean logic of meditation
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 153-170
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2021-0119
What do hashtags afford in digital fashion communication? An exploratory study on Gucci-related hashtags on Twitter and Instagram
In: Semiotica 2021, Issue 243
- Pages
- 325-351
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2019-0114
“In my head, I have a cleaning lady:” Symbol form and symbolic intention in the everyday use of money
In: Semiotica 2020, Issue 235
- Pages
- 119-151
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2018-0100
Charles Peirce and firstness: The category of origins
In: Semiotica 2020, Issue 235
- Pages
- 63-73
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2018-0038
Collocational semiosis in the academic discourse of the Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA): The case of AFRICA
In: Semiotica 2020, Issue 235
- Pages
- 185-227
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2017-0103
Embodied ekphrasis of experience: Bodily rhetoric in mediating affect in interaction
In: Semiotica 2020, Issue 235
- Pages
- 91-111
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2017-0126
Garroni, the late Peirce, and the issue of creativity
In: Semiotica 2020, Issue 235
- Pages
- 165-184
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2018-0128
Image and word as forms of iconic depiction
In: Semiotica 2020, Issue 235
- Pages
- 75-90
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2018-0112
In the footsteps of the semiotic school of Moscow-Tartu / Tartu-Moscow: Evaluations and perspectives
In: Semiotica 2020, Issue 235
- Pages
- 229-241
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2018-0065
Peirce, Aristotle, metaphor – and comments to Factor
In: Semiotica 2020, Issue 235
- Pages
- 51-61
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2018-0037
Re charged emblems: Hawthorne and semiotic metamorphics
In: Semiotica 2020, Issue 235
- Pages
- 1-26
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2017-0119
Semeiotic time
In: Semiotica 2020, Issue 235
- Pages
- 113-117
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2018-0108
The spectrum of subjectal forms: Towards an Integral Semiotics
In: Semiotica 2020, Issue 235
- Pages
- 27-49
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2018-0022
Multiculturalism as Multimodal Communication
- Edition
- 1 edition
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Other title information: A Semiotic Perspective
Annotation: This highly readable book develops a numanistic, and specifically semiotic approach to multiculturalism. It reveals how semiotics provides fresh and valuable insights into multiculturalism: in contrast to the binary logic of dualistic philosophy, semiotic logic does not understand the value of truth in rigid terms of ‘true’ or ‘false’, ‘right’ or ‘wrong’ only. The value of truth resides in meaning, which is a dynamic, evolutionary phenomenon, rooted, nevertheless, in factuality. Drawing on recent developments in biosemiotics, the book presents a theoretical approach to multiculturalism, regarding the lives of people living in multicultural environments. Rather than analyzing political or economic phenomena, it offers a semiotic analysis of multiculturalism and discusses its educational implications. It also invites readers to regard learning as a phenomenon of ecological sign growth and to understand multiculturalism along the same lines. As such, it brings together the life and social sciences and the humanities in a unified perspective, in an approach fitting postmodernism.
Identifier: 9783030178826
Status: Available
Of Essence and Context
- Edition
- 1 edition
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Other title information: Between Music and Philosophy
Annotation: This book provides a new approach to the intersections between music and philosophy. It features articles that rethink the concepts of musical work and performance from ontological and epistemological perspectives and discuss issues of performing practices that involve the performer’s and listener’s perceptions.
Identifier: 9783030144708
Status: Available
Structural Units of Mass Culture Mythology
- Edition
- 1 edition
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Other title information: A Cultural Semiotic Approach
Annotation: My dissertation focuses on the study of myths and their semiotic mechanisms that appear in contemporary mass culture texts. Although myths and mass culture as a whole have been widely discussed from the perspectives of various disciplines, there are no studies that deal with the systematization of mass culture mythology and the semiotic definition of mythic markers. The topic of this dissertation is interesting not only from a general theoretical, philosophical, anthropological and semiotic perspective, but also for practical reasons. I believe that I can convincingly show in my work that the study and identification of semiotic mechanisms of mass culture myths is applicable in the field of marketing semiotics and social communication. In my dissertation, I first compare mass culture mythology from a sociological, philosophical-anthropological and semiotic perspective. This allows me to combine the two main epistemological approaches to myth research and treat myth as a holistic meta-concept on the one hand, and approach myth as a cultural text on the other. Based on the framework I have created, I will analyze various texts of mass culture in my work and focus on identifying the most common and enduring structural units of mass culture mythology. How do I define a smaller unit of myth? In defining it, I will rely on two structural principles of myth: the emic unit, which I denote by the concept of mythologeme, and the hybrid unit, which I denote by the concept of mytheme. In the course of the analysis, I will highlight the following mythologemes: Fate, Journey, Universality, Catastrophe, Golden Age and Mother Nature, and the mythemes: Transformation and Return. In addition to distinguishing the aforementioned mythologemes and mythemes, I will highlight their value and function in mythological discourse. Fate and Journey help to integrate the life of the individual into the whole. The mythologeme of Mother Nature is associated with the existential need of a person to search for authenticity and identity. The mythologemes of the Universe, Catastrophe and Golden Age constitute the human time-spatial past-present-future triad. The latter are related to human questions about the origin of the world, nostalgia for the past and fears about the future. The mythologeme of Transformation points to the idea of miracle and the mythologeme of Return to the time-spatial axis of the human semiosphere, to orderliness. The last chapter of the work applies the theoretical framework developed in the dissertation to specific case studies. The first of them is dedicated to the analysis of the TV political marketing of the Ukrainian politician Darth Vader, and there I show how archetypal mythological meanings were included in the structure of the political narrative. The second case study focuses on the development of a specific brand, which I did in collaboration with the well-known Russian pop artist Manizha, and where I apply the mythologeme of Mother Nature.Further research into mythologemes and mythemes could open up new semiotic markers and thereby expand the field of application of semiotics, as well as help to better understand the mythological basis of culture. This dissertation presents a semiotic study of myth revealing in contemporary mass cultural texts and exploration of its inner semiotic machinery. Although a variety of studies have been devoted to myth, and quite a few studies have tackled mass culture issues, less attention has been given to the systematic articulation of mass cultural mythology and its markers, which reveal its inner semiotic machinery. Those issues are relevant not only from a general theoretical philosophical, anthropological, and semiotic point of view, but also have concrete applicability in marketing semiotics and social communications. Firstly, I discuss mass culture under an emancipatory umbrella approach and explore mass culture mythology from the sociological, philosophical-anthropological and semiotic perspectives. Secondly, I combine two main epistemological attitudes of myth and integrate a holistic object of research – which appears as a meta-concept – from one side, and a text of culture – mass cultural narratives around brands conveying their main values – from the other side . Thirdly, I discuss the smallest units of mass culture mythology and explore its most widespread structural units. I classify the smallest units of myth by their structural principles: the emic units (mythologemes) and the hybrid ones (mythemes). There are the mythologemes of Fate, Course, Universe, Catastrophe, Golden Age, and Mother Nature, and the mythemes of Transformation and Backtracking considered in detail. The main existential values of those smallest mythological units are discussed. The mythologemes of Fate and Course help to understand individual life as a part of an integral whole. The mythologeme of Mother Nature relates to the existential search for inner authenticity and identity. The mythologemes of Universe, Catastrophe, and Golden Age constitute an integral triadic idea about time and space (past-present-future) and reflect the human existential quest for an explanation of the world origin, nostalgia for the past and fears about the future. The mytheme of Transformation represents the idea of mythological miracle, and the mytheme of Backtracking appeals to the idea of a mastered time and space. Fourthly, I extend the process to find more minimal units of myth in cultural texts of different genres. The first case is dedicated to close analysis of the television communication of the Ukrainian politician Darth Vader. This case demonstrates the combination of archaic meanings and contemporary forms of myth within a narrative, producing new powerful connotations. The second case applies the Mother Nature mythologeme as a branding tool for building a coherent image of a musical artist. The further exploration of the mythologemes and mythemes and articulation of other semiotic markers of myth systematically enriches a profound understanding of human mind and culture.
Identifier: 9789949032150
Status: Available
Adaptation, learning, Bildung: Discussion with edu- and biosemiotics
In: Sign Systems Studies 2018, Volume 46, Issue 4: Learning and adaptation: Semiotic perspectives
- Pages
- 435-451
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Identifier: 10.12697/SSS.2018.46.4.02
Passions of Our Time
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Notes: edited with foreword by Lawrence D. Kritzman. Printed version in two notebooks
Annotation: Julia Kristeva is a true polymath, an intellectual of astonishingly wide range whose erudition and insight have been brought to bear on psychoanalysis, literary criticism, gender and sex, and cultural critique. Passions of Our Time showcases recent essays of Kristeva’s that demonstrate the scope of her capacious intellect, her gifts as a stylist, and the profound contribution of her thought to the challenges of the present. The collection begins with а vivid recollection of celebrating, as a child in Bulgaria, Alphabet Day, the holiday honoring the Cyrillic letters, which proceeds outward into a contemplation of the writer as translator. Kristeva considers literature with Barthes, freedom through Rousseau, Teresa of Avila and mystical experience, Simone de Beauvoir’s dream life, and Antigone and the psychic life of women. A group of essays drawing on her psychoanalytic work delve into Freud, Lacan, maternal eroticism, and the continued importance of psychoanalysis today. In a series of striking investigations, she thinks through disability and normativity, monotheism and secularization, the need to believe and the desire to know. Calling for the courage to renew and reinvent humanism, she outlines the principles of a stance founded on the importance of respecting human life. Finally, Kristeva discusses French culture and diversity, rethinking universalism and interrogating the potential for Islam and psychoanalysis to meet, and pays homage to Beauvoir by rephrasing her dictum into the provocative “One is born woman, but I become one.”
Identifier: 9780231171441
Status: Available
Umberto Eco on the biosemiotics of Giorgio Prodi
In: Sign Systems Studies 2018, Volume 46, Issue 2/3
- Pages
- 352-364
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Identifier: 10.12697/SSS.2018.46.2-3.08
3D printing: Of signs and objects
In: Semiotica 2017, Issue 218
- Pages
- 165-177
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2015-0127
An Invitation to Creative Reflection
In: Cybernetics & Human Knowing 2017, Volume 24, Issue 1: Evolution and Communication—Heterodox Rethinkings
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Analyzing the fictional worlds of Pixar with an eye on digital humanities
In: Semiotica 2017, Issue 218
- Pages
- 91-117
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2016-0081
Building Communication Theory From Cybersemiotics
In: Cybernetics & Human Knowing 2017, Volume 24, Issue 1: Evolution and Communication—Heterodox Rethinkings
- Pages
- 9-32
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Evolution and Communication: Heterodox Rethinkings
In: Cybernetics & Human Knowing 2017, Volume 24, Issue 1: Evolution and Communication—Heterodox Rethinkings
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Gli stili prenatali
- Dependent title
- Un'estetica psicofisiologica
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Annotation: This book, in this re-edition, contains a broad update of the research on the topic of prenatal styles. What is proposed here is a psychophysiological aesthetics and at the same time a semiotics that provides tools to diagnose "senseless" pathological behaviors as symptoms of an obsessive or regressive condition corresponding to a certain prenatal evolutionary phase. The volume is aimed at a wide and varied audience. In particular, it is proposed as a training tool for teachers of verbal and non-verbal expressive disciplines, for teachers and students of humanistic disciplines, for educators, animators, community assistants and health personnel.
Identifier: 9788869922787
Status: Available
Mimicry and Meaning
- Edition
- 1 edition
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Other title information: Structure and Semiotics of Biological Mimicry
Annotation: The present book analyses critically the tripartite mimicry model (consisting of the mimic, model and receiver species) and develops semiotic tools for comparative analysis. It is proposed that mimicry has a double structure where sign relations in communication are in constant interplay with ecological relations between species. Multi-constructivism and toolbox-like conceptual methods are advocated for, as these allow taking into account both the participants’ Umwelten as well as cultural meanings related to specific mimicry cases. From biosemiotic viewpoint, mimicry is a sign relation, where deceptively similar messages are perceived, interpreted and acted upon. Focusing on living subjects and their communication opens up new ways to understand mimicry. Such view helps to explain the diversity of mimicry as well as mimicry studies and treat these in a single framework. On a meta-level, a semiotic view allows critical reflection on the use of mimicry concept in modern biology. The author further discusses interpretations of mimicry in contemporary semiotics, analyses mimicry as communicative interaction, relates mimicry to iconic signs and focuses on abstract resemblances in mimicry. Theoretical discussions are illustrated with detailed excursions into practical mimicry cases in nature (brood parasitism, eyespots, myrmecomorphy, etc.). The book concludes with a conviction that mimicry should be treated in a broader semiotic-ecological context as it presumes the existence of ecological codes and other sign conventions in the ecosystem.
Identifier: 9783319503158
Status: Available
Paulo Freire and Ernst Cassirer: Mythic and Superstitious Consciousness in Contemporary Academic Culture
In: The American Journal of Semiotics 2017, Volume 33, Issue 3/4
- Pages
- 357-372
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Some 19th Century Problems Of Evolution (1965)
In: Cybernetics & Human Knowing 2017, Volume 24, Issue 1: Evolution and Communication—Heterodox Rethinkings
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Sounds, Societies, Significations
- Edition
- 1 edition
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Other title information: Numanistic Approaches to Music
Annotation: This edited book covers many topics in musicological literature, gathering various approaches to music studies that encapsulate the vivid relation music has to society. It focusses on repertoires and geographical areas that have not previously been well frequented in musicology. As readers will see, music has many roles to play in society. Music can be a generator of social phenomena, or a result of them; it can enhance or activate social actions, or simply co-habit with them. Above all, music has a stable position within society, in that it actively participates in it. Music can either describe or prescribe social aspects; musicians may have a certain position/role in society (e.g., the “popstar” as fashion leader, spokesman for political issues, etc.). Depending on the type of society, music may have a certain “meaning” or “function” (music does not mean the same thing everywhere in the world). Lastly, music can define a society, and it is not uncommon for it to best define a particular historical moment.
Identifier: 9783319470597
Status: Available
Staying over-optimistic about the future: Uncovering attentional biases to climate change messages
In: Semiotica 2017, Issue 218
- Pages
- 21-64
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2016-0074
Stroke systems in Chinese characters: A systemic functional perspective on simplified regular script
In: Semiotica 2017, Issue 218
- Pages
- 1-19
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Identifier: DOI: 10.1515/sem-2015-0111