- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > ドイツ書
- > Humanities, Arts & Music
- > Linguistics
- > general surveys & lexicons
Full Description
Marketing text:
This edited volume includes contributions from scholars worldwide addressing how feeling, skill, and knowledge are present in the processes of signification, the subject's life, environment, and culture. Understanding signs, signification and their dynamics are now more crucial than ever as meaning affects how human beings flourish in social systems and societies. This text focuses on how theories and research into meaning and signification address knowledge, skill, and feeling - three concepts that are central to semiosis. The book is primarily of interest to scholars and students working in psychology, philosophy, communication, cultural studies, the arts - and semiotics.
Contents
Chapter 1. Sentient Relations: The Semiotic View on the Subject, Its Environment, Feelings, Knowledge and Skills.- Chapter 2. Feeling complementarity: Giorgio Prodi and the biosemiotic analysis of
protosemiosis in nature.- Chapter 3. Physicality in Thinking.- Chapter 4. Multisensory Processing, Affect and Multimodal manipulation: Investigating Travel Documentaries.- Chapter 5. Why Reality is Not (Just) Discourse: Eco's Path to Cognitive Semiotics.- Chapter 6. On the Cognitive, Projective and Evaluative Functions of Spatial Codes.- Chapter 7. Objective and Subjective Minds in Sacred-Profane Courtyards through Spatial Semiotics.- Chapter 8. Everyday Narrations of Urban Green: Values of Green Areas in Users' Digital Georeferenced Comments.- Chapter 9. Flat Earth Cartosemiotics and Modelling.- Chapter 10. The Rumor Phenomenon in the Society of Knowledges and Itsn Ontological Status in Semiotics.- Chapter 11. Online Memetic Engagement and Collective Memory: The Case of "Lying Flat".- Chapter 12. Affect as Discursive Practice and Beyond.- Chapter 13. Assimilation or Annihilation? The failure of cultural translation in Mahasweta Devi's "Pterodactyl".- Chapter 14. Easy Signs, Accessible Signs, Perhaps More Developed Signs:Reflections on Easy Language and Translation.- Chapter 15. Storying Humans Brimming Over: To Emote, to Show, to Tell, to Write, or ChatGPT.- Chapter 16. Unable to Articulate Feelings? Alexithymia in the Context of Thure von Uexküll's Integrated Medicine.- Chapter 17. The Naming of Pilates Exercises as an Endeavor to Create Meaning.- Chapter 18. Observing Inner Speech in Meaning-Making Through Visual Artistic Texts.- Chapter 19. Ecosemiotic Theatre: Using Forest Modelling to Activate Skills ofnFeeling and Knowing.- Chapter 20. Meaning and Context in the Electronic Dance Pop Album Trouble in Paradise by La Roux.- Chapter 21. Music and Indigenous Knowledge Systems: A Semiotic Deconstruction of Purulia Chhau of Bengal, India.- Chapter 22. The Role of Fascia in the Semiotics of Feeling, Skill, and Knowledge in Contact Improvisation.- Chapter 23. Music Analytical Model of the Skill of Emotional Contagion: Pride and Benevolence in Mozart's Piano Concerto K. 466.- chapter 24. Peircean Analysis of Feeling, Skill, and Knowledge as Determinants of Performer's Semiotic Space in WAM.- Chapter 25. Embodied Polysemiotic Communication: A Cognitive Semiotic Perspective on Speech and Gestures.- Chapter 26. Making and "Coming Together": The Life of Semiotic Forms in the Light of Aboutness and Engagement.- Chapter 27. On One's Semiotic Affinities.- Chapter 28. Feeling and Aesthetic Knowledge According to Peirce.- Chapter 29. Emotions and Feelings in the Personal-social Construction of Knowledge.