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Topic: Connotation (semiotics)


In the News (Thu 17 Dec 09)

  
  Semiotics for Beginners: Strengths
Semiotic techniques 'in which the analogy of language as a system is extended to culture as a whole' can be seen as representing 'a substantial break from the positivist and empirical traditions which had limited much previous cultural theory' (Franklin et al.
Semiotics may not itself be a discipline but it is at least a focus of enquiry, with a central concern for meaning-making practices which conventional academic disciplines treat as peripheral.
Semiotics makes us aware that the cultural values with which we make sense of the world are a tissue of conventions that have been handed down from generation to generation by the members of the culture of which we are a part.
www.aber.ac.uk /media/Documents/S4B/sem10.html   (2347 words)

  
  Connotation (semiotics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In semiotics, connotation arises when the denotative relationship between a signifier and its signified is inadequate to serve the needs of the community.
Connotative meanings are developed by the community and do not represent the inherent qualities of the thing or concept originally signified as the denotational meaning.
Hence, the meanings as to health or illness are selected from the connotational framework which the interpreter has constructed through training and experience given that each possible state of well-being is represented by a cluster of symbolic attributes, one of which is the patient's temperature.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Connotation_(Semiotics)   (624 words)

  
 Connotation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The connotation of a word or other expression in a language may be one of several aspects of its meaning.
Connotation is often contrasted with denotation, which is more or less synonymous with extension.
Alternatively, the connotation of the word may be thought of as the set of all its possible referents (as opposed to merely the actual ones).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Connotation   (371 words)

  
 Semiotics for Beginners: Denotation, Connotation and Myth
In semiotics, denotation and connotation are terms describing the relationship between the signifier and its signified, and an analytic distinction is made between two types of signifieds: a denotative signified and a connotative signified.
Connotation, in short, produces the illusion of denotation, the illusion of language as transparent and of the signifier and the signified as being identical.
Connotation is a second-order of signification which uses the denotative sign (signifier and signified) as its signifier and attaches to it an additional signified.
www.aber.ac.uk /media/Documents/S4B/sem06.html   (3110 words)

  
 Cultural Semiotics
Semiotics, translated as the science of signification, is often said to derive from two sources, the American philosopher Charles Sanders Peirce, and the Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure.
Lecture 2: The Psychology and Archaeology of Semiosis.
Since April 1, 2005, the Department of semiotics participates, in collaboration with the Department of cognitive science and the Institute of linguistics, in a project financed by the EU commission which has as its main theme the study of "Stages in the Evolution and Development of Sign Use".
www.arthist.lu.se /kultsem/semiotics/kult_sem_engb.html   (2324 words)

  
 Semiotics for Beginners
Semiotics is difficult to disentangle from structuralism, whose major exponents include Claude Lévi-Strauss in anthropology and Jacques Lacan in psychoanalysis.
Semiotic narratology is concerned with narrative in any mode - literary or non-literary, verbal or visual - but tends to focus on minimal narrative units and the 'grammar of the plot' (some theorists refer to story grammars).
Semiotics can help to make us aware of what we take for granted in representing the world, reminding us that we are always dealing with signs, not with an unmediated objective reality, and that sign systems are involved in the construction of meaning.
www.rzuser.uni-heidelberg.de /~sberwing/S4B/semold.html   (11200 words)

  
 The Historical Nature of Myth
Although semiotics is a recognized discipline within the study of communication, it remains at the margins of popular discourse.
I then posit a semiotic theory that constitutes a particular rule of communication beyond the notion of connotation, and propose a methodological move to extend Hjelmslev's formulation of semiosis to the analysis of the expression of cultural myth.
The connotative meaning is assumed through specific cultural knowledge of the sign, and cultural knowledge is carried through the specificity of the relationship (R) between the expression and the content.
www.wright.edu /~elliot.gaines/analysisofmyth.htm   (4719 words)

  
 Neue Seite 1   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Connotation refers to its socio-cultural and personal associations (ideological, emotional etc.), deriving from the interpreter's class, age, gender, ethnicity and so on.
Connotation is a second-order of signification which uses the denotative sign (signifier and signified) as its signifier and attaches to it an additional signified.
And the methods of linguistics provide the semiotic of the cinema with a constant and precious help in establishing units that are responsible over time to become progressively refined.
www.merz-akademie.de /projekte/emma/00W/semiotics/seite3.htm   (736 words)

  
 Semiotics and Cultural Criticism by Arthur Berger
Semiotics is associated with the work of the Americon philosopher, C S Peirce (although its roots are in medieval philosophy) and semiology with the work of the Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure.
Because semiotics is concerned with everything that can be seen as a sign, and given that just about everything can be seen as a sign (that is, substituting for something else), semiotics emerges as a kind of master science that has utility in all areas of knowledge, especially in the humanities, arts, and social sciences.
Connotation is a term used to describe the cultural meanings attached to a term-and, by extension, an image, a figure in a text, or even a text.
www.dartmouth.edu /~engl5vr/Berger.html   (5284 words)

  
 Denotation/Connotation
In the case of the logical distinction, the connotation is identical with the content, or with a particular feature analysis of the content, and the denotation is another name for the referent, or for the relation connecting the content to the referent or, in some conceptions, starting out directly from the expression.
Moreover, in some versions of the distinction, the semantic domain subject to segmentation is extended on the side termed connotation, so as to include also the subjective mental content of the sender and/or receiver of the sign, without the latter being clearly distinguished from the marginal content domain of the sign.
Indeed, four-letter words certainly connote their being "four-letter words", but this effect is produced quite independently of the reactions of the auditory, and of the degree of emotion with which the words are used.
www.arthist.lu.se /kultsem/encyclo/denotation_connotation.html   (1934 words)

  
 Semiotics - Psychology Central   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Semiotics theorises at a general level about signs, while the study of the communication of information in living organisms is covered in biosemiotics.
To explain the relationship between Semiotics and Communication Studies, communication is defined as the process of transferring data from a source to a receiver as efficiently and effectively as possible.
Though he insisted that animals are not capable of language, he expanded the purview of semiotics to include non-human signaling and communication systems, thus raising some of the issues addressed by philosophy of mind and coining the term zoosemiotics.
psychcentral.com /psypsych/Semiology   (1862 words)

  
 COMM 300 - Semiology - Barthes - Terms
Semiotics, Semiosis, Semiology: The noun form of the study of signs and signification, the process of attaching signifieds to signifiers, the study of signs and signifying systems.
Connotative: Points to the signified but has a deeper meaning.
Second-order semiological system: Connotative system that incorporate the sign of an initial system which becomes the signifier of the second system.
www.ic.arizona.edu /~comm300/mary/semiotics/barthes.terms.html   (411 words)

  
 HFCL TUTORIAL Semiotics
In semiotic terms, this situation is known as metaphor, and it occurs when signs with conflicting concepts overlap in a way that lets the reader accept them as simultaneously true.
In the same sense that the term "connotation" refers refers to the personal meaning that a person makes from his or her encounter with a sign, the term "myth" refers to the unconscious, collective meaning that a society makes from a semiotic process.
Barthes' theory of semiotic myth suggests that the process by which these meanings are established is itself a sign whose meaning is shared among all of the members of the society, and which is likely to be subconscious.
www.rdillman.com /HFCL/TUTOR/Semiotics/sem4.html   (1525 words)

  
 Semiotics of New Media Literacy
Semiotics is one of the approaches to Media Education and new media literacy.
Umberto Eco defines semiotics as “the discipline studying everything which can be used in order to lie,” in his book, A Theory of Semiotics; because if “something cannot be used to tell a lie, conversely it cannot be used to tell the truth; it cannot, in fact, be used to tell at all.
Although semiotics is both a sphere of inquiry and a meta-analytic tool which has been used in philosophy, anthropology, sociology and linguistics, examination of signs in an educational context is a relatively recent phenomenon.
euphrates.wpunj.edu /faculty/yildizm/SP   (5446 words)

  
 connotation - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about connotation
Calling someone a ‘sloth’, instead of meaning that the person looks like a sloth, uses the connotation of that animal with its characteristic slow movement, thus the metaphor is employed to suggest that the person is also slow moving.
There was more than that in the connotation of his name.
Woman that adventured were adventuresses, and the connotation was not nice.
encyclopedia.farlex.com /connotation   (164 words)

  
 Connotation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Connotations are thought to color what a word "really means" with Emotion or value judgments.
A desire for increased positive connotations (or fewer negative ones) is one of the main reasons for using euphemisms.
It is licensed under the GNU free documentation license.
pda.molinu.com /wiki/en/co/Connotation.htm   (240 words)

  
 semiotics
During the course of the development of structuralism, the 'linguistic turn' in philosophy, anthropology, sociology and so on became so dominant that Barthes was prepared to consider the reversal of Saussure's classification and consider that semiology is a part of linguistics.
More serious, though perhaps more academic, is the charge that semiotics was on a hiding to nothing in the first place, since structuralism and post-structuralism derive from a fundamental misunderstanding of the relationship between the specialized study of linguistics and the more general philosophical conclusions which could (or could not) legitimately be drawn from it.
Semiotics or semiology is an example of the school of social philosophy known as structuralism.
www.cultsock.ndirect.co.uk /MUHome/cshtml/semiomean/semio1.html#arbitrariness   (7029 words)

  
 SEMIOTICS
The connotation is more important because it is the suggestion of an ad that is the working power...
Connotation is not blatant, a sort of hidden message--yet a more powerful stimulant...
Connotations are usually more important to analyze because they vary from culture to culture, person to person, trend to trend...
www.efn.org /~heroux/semio.html   (607 words)

  
 Semiotics: What does it all mean?
Structuralism was a mixture of semiotics with a left-wing mindset that was "concerned in early formulation with the interrelationship of the various signifiers within the sign system" (Cook, 222).
The role of communication in semiotics and linguistics is also an important process for it describes the interaction of the film and the audience.
He continues that "the signifiers of connotation, which we shall call connotators, are made up of signs (signifiers and signifieds united) of the denoted system.
www.geocities.com /Hollywood/Heights/7598/semiotics.html   (2952 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Semiotics is an enormously broad approach to understanding such matters as meaning, cognition, culture, behavior, even life itself.
We believe that most semioticians would agree, however, that semiotic theory offers the position that a wide variety of problems in modern inquiry, taken from a number of different disciplines, are actually special cases of one general set of problems.
In fact most semiotic inquiry that focuses upon the equivalence relation between signs and objects use language as a model for other systems of significance; that is, other systems of equivalence codes were treated as if they were linguistic codes (possessing rules of grammar and representation, for example).
www.indiana.edu /~educp550/shtcrs.html   (3980 words)

  
 Denotation - Psychology Central   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
The logical, linguistic and semiotic term denotation is the common element in several significant pairings or distinctions:
The connotation is a symbol of religion, according to the media connotation.
The connotation is a symbol of love and affection, not in the way of a rose, but a symbol of true love.
psychcentral.com /psypsych/Denotation   (336 words)

  
 HFCL TUTORIAL Semiotics
On the other hand, the connotations of #frog# depend on each person's individual experiences and might include such as memories of a dissection experiment in biology class, or a story about a frog read as a young child, or just the rather vague concept "ugggh."
Thus, while people do have their own personal, connotative meanings for many signs, most signs have at least one meaning that is shared in common.
In fact the conventional meanings of signs in a society are under continual renegotiation as new possible meanings arise, are considered, and are accepted or rejected.
www.rdillman.com /HFCL/TUTOR/Semiotics/sem2.html   (636 words)

  
 Philosophy of language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Some philosophers -- for instance some semiotic outlooks, and some works by linguist Noam Chomsky -- worry that the term "language" is too vague.
The conceptual meaning of an expression inevitably involves both definition (also called "connotation" and "intension" in the literature) and extension (also called "denotation").
One issue that has bothered philosophers and ordinary people for as long as there have been words is the problem of the vagueness of words.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Philosophy_of_language   (2529 words)

  
 Survey of Popular Culture: Semiotics Handout   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
In semiotics, the usually unstated rules that govern the interpretation of a sign or signs.
The connotation of the sign "space shuttle" was destabilized; it became once again subject–as a denotation–to an unpredictable number of individual meanings or competing ideological interpretations.
Challenger connotation of the "fallibility of scientific bureaucracy" and reinstate the shuttle as a metaphoric vehicle reek of non-sequitur and would seem to suggest a clear and perhaps contagious case of historical amnesia; yet they testify as well to the resilience of the dream.
mtsu32.mtsu.edu:11072 /Courses/3610/semiotics.htm   (1172 words)

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