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SEMIOTICS AND STRUCTURALISM

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1 SEMIOTICS AND STRUCTURALISM
© Serhiy Kvit

2 Semiotics Science of sign systems. The object of semiotic research is all areas of cultural activity, which can be considered as a system of signs, organized in accordance with cultural codes and the process of meaning-making.

3 Ferdinand de Saussure (1857 - 1913)
the double nature of the sign

4 Ferdinand de Saussure the basis of language are not the elements of language, but the relationship between them the sign has a dual essence (form and content) the connection between form and content is conditional signifying (form) is constructed linearly

5 Charles Pierce ( ) semiotics

6 Charles Pierce sign  object  interpreter

7 Structuralism The field of knowledge, which is based on system-structural analysis. sign  text  discourse

8 Text In a broad sense, it is a structure consisting of elements of meaning, unity of these elements and the expression of this unity. In the narrow sense, - the unity of language signs, organized according to the norms of this language and are carriers of information.

9 Discourse The totality of expressions related to a particular problem is considered in mutual relations with this problem, and also in mutual relations between them. The units of discourse are specific statements that function in real historical, social and cultural conditions, and in their content and structure reflect the time aspect, the interactions between the partners that create this type of discourse, as well as the space in which it occurs, the meanings that it has creates, uses, reproduces or transforms.

10 Volodymyr Propp ( ) the morphology of the fairy tale

11 Volodymyr Propp The Beginning of Structuralism: "The morphology of the fairy tale" (1928). The syntactic level of the text considers internal relations between signs; semantic - between signs and what they mean; pragmatic - between signs and those who perceive them.

12 Claude Levy-Strauss (1908-2009)
radical structure

13 Claude Levy-Strauss The structure is a certain system, which consists of such elements, that the change of one of them entails the change of all others. Secondly, any model belongs to a sequence of transformations, each of which corresponds to models of the same type, so that a certain number of these transformations creates a group of models. Third, the above properties allow predict how the model will react to change one of the elements that make up it. Finally, the model should be designed in such a way that its application encompasses all the phenomena under study.

14 tasks of different structure for children
Jean Piaget ( ) tasks of different structure for children

15 Jean Piaget The structure can be defined as a model adopted in linguistics, mathematics, logic, physics, biology, etc., if it meets the following three conditions: a) integrity - the subordination of the elements of the whole and the independence of the latter; b) self-regulation - the internal functioning of rules within the given system; c) transformation - an orderly transition from one substructure to another.

16 non-radical structure
Roland Barthes ( ) non-radical structure

17 Roland Barthes A structural person takes reality and dissociates it, and then reunites the dismembered; at first glance, this seems to be irrelevant. However, from another point of view it turns out that this trivia is decisive, because in the gap between these two objects, or two phases of structuralist activity, something new is born (...). The model is an intelligence added to the subject, and this application has anthropological significance in the sense that it manifests itself as a person, his/her history, its situation, its freedom, and even the contradiction that nature makes to his/her mind.

18 Yuri Lotman ( ) semiotics of culture

19 Yuri Lotman culture is a collection of texts, or a complex text
   primary and secondary modeling systems    culture is the generator of the structurnity

20 Umberto Eco ( ) over-interpretation

21 Umberto Eco open work (from the age of Baroque) - "by plan" and "internally open"   ideal reader   textual cooperation over-interpretation   threats of hyperreality

22 Umberto Eco the denial of his right to "paranoid interpretation"
involvement of the reader in the generating of a textual meaning    the denial of his right to "paranoid interpretation"


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