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definitions

Semiotics

  1. Sign-something which can stand for something else
  2. Code– technical, written and symbolic tools which used to construct or suggest meaning in media forms.
  3. Convention– accepted ways of using media codes
  4. Dominant Signifier– the main representative.
  5. Anchorage-words with an image to provide context

Ferdinand de Saussure:

  1. Signifier-Any material thing that signifies something.
  2. Signified-The concept that a signifier refers to.

C S Pierce:

  1. Icon-physically resembles thing or idea
  2. Index-A sign that has a link to its object
  3. Symbol-Symbol, a sign that has an arbitrary or random link to its object

Roland Barthes:

  1. Signification-process of the construction of meaning from the signs
  2. Denotation-, first level analysis (what a reader can see on the page)
  3. Connotation-meanings or associations we have with the image
  4. Myth-naturalizes events turning history into nature
  5. Ideology-a world view about how society should function
  6. radical– something you wouldn’t expect / out of the ordinary
  7. reactionary-what you would expect/ follows stereotypes

paradign– a collection of similar signs

syntagm– the sequences in which signs work.

definitions

SEMIOTICS

sign- something which can stand for something else

code– written or symbolic tools used to suggest meaning in media forms.

convention- accepted ways of using media codes

dominant signifier- the main sign

anchorage- Words with an image to go along with the text which provides context

FERDINAND DE SAUSSURE

Signified-stands in for something else

signifier-thing or idea trying to be evoked

C S PIERCE

icon-a sign that looks like its object

index- a sign that has a link to its object

symbol-a sign that has a more random link to its object

ROLAND BARTHES

signification- structural levels of signification, meaning or representative

denotation-the most basic or literal meaning of a sign

connotation- signs that are used as signifiers for a secondary meaning

myth- naturalizes events, turning history into nature

ideology- codes that reinforce or are congruent with structures of power

radical- something that challenges dominant ideas

reactionary- something that confirms dominant ideas

Paradigm- a typical example or pattern of something; a pattern or model

Syntagm- a linguistic unit consisting of a set of linguistic forms (phonemes, words or phrases) that are in a sequential relationship to one another.

KEY Language

Semiotics
SignSomething which can stand for something else
CodeWritten or symbolic tools used to suggest meaning in media forms
ConventionAccepted ways of using media code
Dominant SignifierThe main representative
AnchorageWords with an image to provide context
Ferdinand de Saussure
SignifierStands in for something else
SignifiedIdea being evoked by signifier
C S Pierce
IconA sign that looks like its object
IndexA sign that has a link to its object
SymbolA sign that has a more random link to its object
Roland Barthes
SignificationStructural levels of signification, meaning or representation
DenotationThe most basic or literal meaning of a sign
ConnotationSigns that are used as signifiers for a secondary meaning
MythNaturalizes events, turning history into nature
IdeologyCodes that reinforce or are congruent with structures of power
RadicalSomething that challenges dominant ideas
ReactionarySomething that confirms dominant ideas
ParadigmA collection of similar signs
SyntagmThe sequence in which signs work

Semiotics

Key language:

Semiotics

  1. Sign – Stands in for something else
  2. Code – Symbolic tools used to create meaning
  3. Convention – Accepted ways of using media code
  4. Dominant Signifier – The main representative
  5. Anchorage – Words with an image to provide context

Ferdinand de Saussure:

  1. Signifier – Stands in for something else
  2. Signified – Idea being evoked by signifier

C S Pierce:

  1. Icon – A sign that looks like its object
  2. Index – A sign that has a link to its object
  3. Symbol – A sign that has a more random link to its object

Roland Barthes:

  1. Signification – Process of the construction of meaning from the signs

2. Denotation- First level analysis (what a reader can see on the page)

3. Connotation- Meanings or associations we have with the image

4. Myth- Naturalises events turning history into nature

5. Ideology- A world view about how society should function

6. Radical- Out of the ordinary or something you wouldn’t expect 

7. Reactionary- Follows stereotypes or something you expect 

8. Syntagm – Where signs occur in sequence or parallel and operate together to create meaning

9. Paradigm – A paradigmatic relationship is one where an individual sign may be replaced by another.

key terminology

Key language:

Semiotics

  1. Sign – Something that can stand for something else.
  2. Code – A combination of semiotic systems.
  3. Convention – What signs are meaningfully organised into.
  4. Dominant Signifier – Main signifier that stands out.
  5. Anchorage – Describe how the combination of elements within a sign fit together and fix the meaning. 

Ferdinand de Saussure:

  1. Signifier – Any material thing that signifies something.
  2. Signified – The concept that a signifier refers to.
  3. Paradigm – Collection of similar signs.
  4. Syntagm – Order of in which signs go and how they link with each other.

C S Pierce:

  1. Icon – A sign that looks like its object.
  2. Index – A sign that has a link to its object.
  3. Symbol – A sign that has an arbitrary or random link to its object.

Roland Barthes:

  1. Signification – Structural levels of signification, meaning or representation.
  2. Denotation –  The most basic or literal meaning of a sign.
  3. Connotation – The secondary, cultural meanings of signs; or “signifying signs,” signs that are used as signifiers for a secondary meaning.
  4. Myth – The most obvious level of signification, but distorts meaning by validating arbitrary cultural assumptions in a way similar to the denotative sign.
  5. Ideology – codes that reinforce or are congruent with structures of power.
  6. Radical – Something that challenges dominant ideas.
  7. Reactionary – Something that confirms dominant ideas.

C.S. Peirce – Peirce’s seminal work in the field was anchored in pragmatism and logic. He defined a sign as “something which stands to somebody for something,” and one of his major contributions to semiotics was the categorization of signs into three main types: (1) an icon, which resembles its referent (such as a road sign for falling rocks); (2) an index, which is associated with its referent (as smoke is a sign of fire); and (3) a symbol, which is related to its referent only by convention (as with words or traffic signals). Peirce also demonstrated that a sign can never have a definite meaning, for the meaning must be continuously qualified.

Ferdinand De Saussure – Swiss linguist, semiotician and philosopher. His ideas laid a foundation for many significant developments in both linguistics and semiotics in the 20th century.

Roland Barthes – French literary theorist, essayist, philosopher, critic, and semiotician. Barthes’ ideas explored a diverse range of fields and he influenced the development of many schools of theory, including structuralism, semiotics, social theory, design theory, anthropology and post-structuralism.

key terms

Semiotics

Sign- stands in for something else

Code- used to construct meaning in media forms

Convention- the accepted way of doing something

Dominant signifier- the main thing that stands in for something else

Anchorage- words that go along with an image to give meaning of context

Ferdinand de Saussure:

Signifier- stands in for something else

Signified- thing or idea trying to be evoked

C S Pierce:

Icon- physically resembles thing or idea

Index- direct relation to thing or idea

Symbol- no relation/ decided by society two things should be linked

Roland Barthes:

Signification- process of the construction of meaning from the signs

Denotation- first level analysis (what a reader can see on the page)

Connotation- meanings or associations we have with the image

Myth- naturalizes events turning history into nature

Ideology- a world view about how society should fuction

Radical- out of the ordinary or something you wouldn’t expect

Reactionary- follows stereotypes or something you expect

Syntagm – where signs occur in sequence or parallel and operate together to create meaning

paradigm – A paradigmatic relationship is one where an individual sign may be replaced by another.

Ferdinand de Saussure ; 26 November 1857 – 22 February 1913) was a Swiss linguistsemiotician and philosopher. His ideas laid a foundation for many significant developments in both linguistics and semiotics in the 20th century He is widely considered one of the founders of 20th-century linguistics and one of two major founders (together with Charles Sanders Peirce) of semiotics, or semiology, as Saussure called it.

Charles Sanders Peirce began writing on semiotics, which he also called semeiotics, meaning the philosophical study of signs, in the 1860s, around the time that he devised his system of three categories. During the 20th century, the term “semiotics” was adopted to cover all tendencies of sign researches, including Ferdinand de Saussure‘s semiology, which began in linguistics as a completely separate tradition.

Barthes’ Semiotic Theory broke down the process of reading signs and focused on their interpretation by different cultures or societies. According to Barthes, signs had both a signifier, being the physical form of the sign as we perceive it through our senses and the signified, or meaning that is interpreted.

KEY TERMS

SEMIOTICS

Sign- stands in for something else

Code- used to construct meaning in media forms

Convention- the accepted way of doing something

Dominant signifier- the main thing that stands in for something else

Anchorage- words that go along with an image to give meaning of context

FERDINAND DE SAUSSURE= Ferdinand de Saussure was a Swiss linguist, semiotician and philosopher. He believed that semiotics is concerned with everything that can be taken as a sign.

Signifier- stands in for something else

Signified- thing or idea trying to be evoked

CS PIERCE= Charles Sanders Peirce was an American philosopher, logician, mathematician and scientist. His Sign Theory, or Semiotic, is an account of signification, representation, reference and meaning.

Icon- physically resembles an object

Index- has a link to an object

Symbol- no relation to object/ decided by society two things should be linked

ROLAND BARTHES= Roland Gérard Barthes was a French literary theorist, essayist, philosopher, critic, and semiotician. His Semiotic Theory broke down the process of reading signs and focused on their interpretation by different cultures or societies

Signification- process of the construction of meaning from the signs

Denotation- first level analysis (what a reader can see on the page)

Connotation- meanings or associations we have with the image

Myth- naturalizes events turning history into nature

Ideology- a world view about how society should fuction

Radical- something you wouldn’t expect / out of the ordinary

Reactionary- what you would expect/ follows stereotypes

Paradigm- collection of similar signs

Syntagm- order of signs linking to each other

Key Terminology (semiotics)

Semiotics: The study of signs

  1. Sign, stands in for something else
  2. Code, used to construct meaning in media forms
  3. Convention, the accepted way of doing something
  4. Dominant Signifier, the main thing that stands in for something else
  5. Anchorage, words that go along with an image to give meaning of context

Ferdinand de Saussure: Saussure believed in a concept, that can be described as “the study of signs and symbols and their use or interpretation.” Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure, one of the two founders of semiotics, introduced these terms as the two main planes, these terms being the ‘signifier’ and the ‘signified’.

  1. Signifier, stands in for something else
  2. Signified, thing or idea trying to be evoked
  3. Syntagm, a sequence or length of things in order to form meaning
  4. Paradigm, a collection of similar signs

C S Pierce: Pierce believed that there were only 3 signs ever, Iconic, Indexical and symbolic. Furthermore this implies that everything is made up of these 3 signs.

  1. Icon, a sign that looks like its object (think of camerawork, sets, props, and Mise-En-Scene)
  2. Index, A sign that has a link to its object (Think of sounds, props)
  3. Symbol, a sign that has an arbitrary or random link to its object (think of colours, textures, shapes, sounds)

Roland Barthes: Barthes semiotician work focused on the signs in the news and how to read them, he would take apart scenes in the news to analyse them more easily and find out what the news is actually saying.

  1. Signifcation, process of the construction of meaning from the signs
  2. Denotation, first level analysis (what a reader can see on the page)
  3. Connotation, meanings or associations we have with the image
  4. Myth, naturalizes events turning history into nature
  5. Ideology, a world view about how society should function
  6. radical, something you wouldn’t expect / out of the ordinary
  7. reactionary, what you would expect/ follows stereotypes

key terms

Semiotics

  1. Sign: stands in for something else
  2. Code: used to make meaning in a media form
  3. Convention: the accepted way of doing something
  4. Dominant Signifier: something that stands in for something else
  5. Anchorage: words that give an image context

Ferdinand de Saussure:

  1. Signifier: the physical existence (sound, word, image) e.g. red/ leaf/round/ apple
  2. Signified: the mental concept e.g. fruit/ apple/ freshness/ teachers pet/ healthy

C S Pierce:

  1. Icon: they have a physical similarity to the objects they signify. e.g. photograph
  2. Index: direct relation to thing or idea e.g. smoke indicates a fire
  3. Symbol: arbitrary/ symbolic signs e.g. red rose symbolises love

Roland Barthes:

  1. Signification: process of the construction of meaning from the signs
  2. Denotation:  first level analysis (what a reader can see on the page)
  3. Connotation: meanings or associations we have with the image
  4. Myth: naturalizes events turning history into nature
  5. Ideology:  a world view about how society should function
  6. radical: out of the ordinary or something you wouldn’t expect
  7. reactionary:  follows stereotypes or something you expect

Key Terminology (Semiotics)

C.S Pierce

Icon – Something that physically resembles a thing or an idea.

Index – Something that has a direct relation to a thing or idea.

Symbol – Something that society decides should have a link to something else, no actual relation.

Roland Barthes

Signification – The representation and conveying of meaning.

Denotation – A a fixed, objective and literal interpretation of a thing or idea.

Connotation – An abstract interpretation of a term, creating commonly understood associations with things.

Myth – Ideas which are commonly believed and spread by people, which are often untrue or only partly true.

Ideology – Systems of ideas which often form the basis of how society should function.

Radical – Something which challenges stereotypical ideas and is out of the ordinary.

Reactionary – Something which is expected, follows and confirms usual stereotypes and is easy to relate to.

Semiotics

Sign – Something which stands for something else.

Code – Something used to construct meaning in media forms.

Convention – The commonly accepted way of doing something.

Dominant Signifier – The main thing which stands in for something else.

Anchorage – Words which go with images to convey meaning or context.

Ferdinand de Saussure

Signifier – The real and literal existence of an object or feeling.

Signified – The mental link to a concept formed by human society.

Paradigm – A collection of similar signs.

Syntagym – A sequence of signs, with the idea of one sign linking and connecting to another in a certain order.