Semiotics
- Sign = A mark, sign or word that indicates, signifies, or is understood as representing an idea, object, or relationship. For example, a love heart could be a sign of being in love.
- Code = These are loads of signs that create a meaning of something. Media codes include the use of camera, acting, setting, mise en scene, editing, lighting, sound, special effects, typography, colour, visual composition, text and graphics to develop a TV advert.
- Convention = The ways media codes are used and combined to form individual or generic media styles.
- Dominant Signifier = The most important thing we see on a piece of media. It also provides anchorage (signs with a fixed meaning
- Anchorage = when a piece of media uses another piece of media to reduce the amount of connotations in the first, therefore allowing the audience to interpret it much more easily
Ferdinand de Saussure:
- Signifier = the physical form of a sign (such as a piece of media from a magazine)
- Signified =this is the actual meaning or idea that has been explored by a sign.
C S Pierce:
- Iconic sign = a sign that looks exactly like its object.
- Indexical sign = a sign that has links to the object
- Symbolic sign = a sign that has a random link to an object.
Roland Barthes:
- Signification = the process of signifying signs by identifying what the sign means.
- Denotation = the translation of a sign into its literal meaning
- Connotation = what signs we can associate with a piece of media.
- Myth = a story that has a false belief or idea, but people believe it to be true
You will also need to understand these key terms:
- Ideology = a system of ideas and beliefs, which forms the basis of an economic or political theory and policy.
- radical = radical texts challenge the dominant ideology
- reactionary = reactionary media follows the dominant ideology
- Paradigm = the relationship of signs, however, one sign could be replaced by another.
- Syntagm = the relationship of signs in sequence or in parallel that create a meaning