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N - Z (Hardcover, Reprint 2020)
Thomas A. Sebeok, Paul Bouissac, Umberto Eco, Jerzy Pelc, Roland Possner, …
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R5,033
Discovery Miles 50 330
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A - M (Hardcover, Reprint 2020)
Thomas A. Sebeok, Paul Bouissac, Umberto Eco, Jerzy Pelc, Roland Possner, …
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R5,033
Discovery Miles 50 330
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Semiotics has had a profound impact on our comprehension of a wide
range of phenomena, from how animals signify and communicate, to
how people read TV commercials. This series features books on
semiotic theory and applications of that theory to understanding
media, language, and related subjects. The series publishes
scholarly monographs of wide appeal to students and interested
non-specialists as well as scholars. AAS is a peer-reviewed series
of international scope.
Part of a series that offers mainly linguistic and anthropological
research and teaching/learning material on a region of great
cultural and strategic interest and importance in the post-Soviet
era.
My writing career has been, at least in this one respect,
idiosyncratic: it had to mark and chart, step by step, its own
peculiar champaign. My earliest papers, beginning in 1942, were
technical articles in this or that domain of Uralic linguistics,
ethnography, and folklore, with a sprinkling of contributions to
North and South American linguistics. In 1954, my name became
fecklessly associated with psycholinguistics, then, successively,
with explorations in my thology, religious studies, and stylistic
problems. It now takes special effort for me to even revive the
circumstances under which I came to publish, in 1955, a hefty tome
on the supernatural, another, in 1958, on games, and yet another,
in 1961, utilizing a computer for extensive sorting of literary
information. By 1962, I had edged my way into animal communication
studies. Two years after that, I first whiffled through what Gavin
Ewart evocatively called "the tulgey wood of semiotics." In 1966, I
published three books which tem porarily bluffed some of my friends
into conjecturing that I was about to meta morphose into a
historiographer of linguistics. The topmost layer in my scholarly
stratification dates from 1976, when I started to compile what
eventually became my "semiotic tetralogy," of which this volume may
supposably be the last. In the language of "Jabberwocky," the word
"tulgey" is said to connote variability and evasiveness. This
notwithstanding, the allusion seems to me apt."
This book is designed to usher the reader into the realm of
semiotic studies. It analyzes the most important approaches to
semiotics as they have developed over the last hundred years out of
philosophy, linguistics, psychology, and biology. As a science of
sign processes, semiotics investigates all types of com munication
and information exchange among human beings, animals, plants,
internal systems of organisms, and machines. Thus it encompasses
most of the subject areas of the arts and the social sciences, as
well as those of biology and medicine. Semiotic inquiry into the
conditions, functions, and structures of sign processes is older
than anyone scientific discipline. As a result, it is able to make
the underlying unity of these disciplines apparent once again
without impairing their function as specializations. Semiotics is,
above all, research into the theoretical foundations of sign
oriented disciplines: that is, it is General Semiotics. Under the
name of Zei chenlehre, it has been pursued in the German-speaking
countries since the age of the Enlightenment. During the nineteenth
century, the systematic inquiry into the functioning of signs was
superseded by historical investigations into the origins of signs.
This opposition was overcome in the first half of the twentieth
century by American Semiotic as well as by various directions of
European structuralism working in the tradition of Semiology.
Present-day General Semiot ics builds on all these developments."
My writing career has been, at least in this one respect,
idiosyncratic: it had to mark and chart, step by step, its own
peculiar champaign. My earliest papers, beginning in 1942, were
technical articles in this or that domain of Uralic linguistics,
ethnography, and folklore, with a sprinkling of contributions to
North and South American linguistics. In 1954, my name became
fecklessly associated with psycholinguistics, then, successively,
with explorations in my thology, religious studies, and stylistic
problems. It now takes special effort for me to even revive the
circumstances under which I came to publish, in 1955, a hefty tome
on the supernatural, another, in 1958, on games, and yet another,
in 1961, utilizing a computer for extensive sorting of literary
information. By 1962, I had edged my way into animal communication
studies. Two years after that, I first whiffled through what Gavin
Ewart evocatively called "the tulgey wood of semiotics." In 1966, I
published three books which tem porarily bluffed some of my friends
into conjecturing that I was about to meta morphose into a
historiographer of linguistics. The topmost layer in my scholarly
stratification dates from 1976, when I started to compile what
eventually became my "semiotic tetralogy," of which this volume may
supposably be the last. In the language of "Jabberwocky," the word
"tulgey" is said to connote variability and evasiveness. This
notwithstanding, the allusion seems to me apt.
This book is designed to usher the reader into the realm of
semiotic studies. It analyzes the most important approaches to
semiotics as they have developed over the last hundred years out of
philosophy, linguistics, psychology, and biology. As a science of
sign processes, semiotics investigates all types of com munication
and information exchange among human beings, animals, plants,
internal systems of organisms, and machines. Thus it encompasses
most of the subject areas of the arts and the social sciences, as
well as those of biology and medicine. Semiotic inquiry into the
conditions, functions, and structures of sign processes is older
than anyone scientific discipline. As a result, it is able to make
the underlying unity of these disciplines apparent once again
without impairing their function as specializations. Semiotics is,
above all, research into the theoretical foundations of sign
oriented disciplines: that is, it is General Semiotics. Under the
name of Zei chenlehre, it has been pursued in the German-speaking
countries since the age of the Enlightenment. During the nineteenth
century, the systematic inquiry into the functioning of signs was
superseded by historical investigations into the origins of signs.
This opposition was overcome in the first half of the twentieth
century by American Semiotic as well as by various directions of
European structuralism working in the tradition of Semiology.
Present-day General Semiot ics builds on all these developments."
"Portraits of Linguists" is a standard biographical work in the
history and theory of linguistics and a resource for all scholars
of 18th, 19th and early 20th-century Western linguistics. Edited by
Thomas A. Sebeok, this text contains articles by eminent scholars
in English, French and German. Ninety-one biographies are featured,
including Wilhelm von Humboldt, Jacob Grimm, Franz Bopp, Sir
William Jones and Max Muller. They constitute a mass of information
on the leading figures in linguistics, and include bibliographical
information in addition to revealing the authors' thoughts on the
various schools of linguistics. Arranged chronologically by
subjects' year of birth, this two-volume work is also indexed at
the end of volume 2 and is a valuable storehouse of information on
the seminal figures in the mainstream of Western linguistics.
Although semiotics has, in one guise or another, ftourished
uninterruptedly since pre Socratic times in the West, and important
semiotic themes have emerged and devel oped independently in both
the Brahmanie and Buddhistic traditions, semiotics as an organized
undertaking began to 100m only in the 1960s. Workshops
materialized, with a perhaps surprising spontaneity, over much
ofEurope-Eastern and Western and in North America. Thereafter,
others quickly surfaced almost everywhere over the litera te globe.
Different places strategically allied themselves with different
lega eies, but all had a common thrust: to aim at a general theory
of signs, by way of a description of different sign systems, their
comparative analysis, and their classifi cation. More or less
permanent confederations were forged with the most diverse academic
disciplines, and amazingly varied frameworks were devised-suited to
the needs of the times and the sites-to carry the work of
consolidation forward. Bit by bit, mutually supportive
international networks were put together. Today, it can truly be
asserted that semiotics has become a global enterprise. This, of
course, is far from saying that the map is uniform or even that
world-wide homogeneity is in the least desirable. While our
conjoint ultimate goal remains steadily in focus, the multiplicity
of avenues available for its realization is inherent in the advent
ure of the search itself."
A Critical Anthology of TwoWay Communication with Man.
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