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Creativity is a highly-prized quality in any modern endeavor,
whether artistic, scientific or professional. Though a much-studied
subject, and the topic of a great many case-studies, the field of
creativity research is still very much an open one. Creativity
remains a field where absolute definitions hold very little water,
and where true insight can only emerge when we properly appreciate
- from a nuanced, multi-disciplinary perspective - the crucial
distinction between the producer's perspective and the consumer's
perspective. Theories that afford us a critical appreciation of a
creative work do not similarly afford a explanatory insight into
the origins and development of the work. As researchers, we must
approach creativity both as producers - to consider the vast
search-spaces that a producer encounters, and to appreciate the
need for heuristic strategies for negotiating this space - and as
consumers, to appreciate the levels of shared knowledge (foreground
and background) that is exploited by the producer to achieve a
knowingly creative effect in the mind of the consumer. This volume
thus brings together both producers and consumers in a
cross-disciplinary exploration of this complex, many-faceted
phenomenon.
Successful communication requires optimal relevance to a target
audience. Relevance theory (RT) provides an excellent model based
on this insight, but the impact of the theory has until now been
restricted due to an almost exclusive focus on spoken face-to-face
communication. Visual and Multimodal Communication: Applying the
Relevance Principle is the first book to systematically demonstrate
how RT can fulfill its promise to develop into an inclusive theory
of communication. In this book, Charles Forceville refines and
adapts RT's original claims to show its applicability to static
visuals and multimodal discourses in popular culture genres. Using
colorful examples, he explains how RT can be expanded and adapted
to accommodate mass-communicative visual and visual-plus-verbal
messages. Forceville addresses issues such as the difference
between drawing prospective addressees' attention to a message and
persuading them to accept it; the thorny continuum from implicit to
explicit information; and the role of genre. Case studies of
pictograms, advertisements, cartoons, and comics provide
contemporary and accessible examples of the importance of genre and
of how the RT model can be connected to other approaches. By
expanding the application of relevance theory to include
mass-communicative messages, Visual and Multimodal Communication
reintroduces a central framework of cognitive linguistics and
pragmatics to a new audience and paves the way for an inclusive
theory of communication.
Over the past few decades, research on metaphor has focused almost exclusively on its verbal and cognitive dimensions. In Pictorial Metaphor in Advertising, Charles Forceville argues that metaphor can also occur in pictures and draws on relevant studies from various disciplines to propose a model for the identification, classification, and analysis of 'pictorial metaphors'. By using insights taken from a range of linguistic, artistic and cognitive perspectives for example, interaction and relevance theory, Forceville shows not only how metaphor can occur in pictures, but also provides a framework within which these pictorial metaphors can be analyzed. The theoretical insights are applied to thirty advertisements and billboards of British, French, German and Dutch origin. Apart from substantiating the claim that it makes sense to talk about `pictorial metaphors', the detailed analyses of the advertisements suggest how metaphor theory can be employed as a tool in media studies. Context in its various manifestations plays a key role in the analyses. Furthermore, the results of a small-scale experiment shed light on where general agreement about the meaning of a pictorial metaphor can shade over into other more idiosyncratic but equally valid interpretations. The final chapter sketches the ways in which the insights gained can be used for further research.
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