Critical semiotics : theory, from information to affect
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Critical semiotics : theory, from information to affect
(Bloomsbury advances in semiotics)
Bloomsbury Academic, 2016
- : pbk.
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [178]-186) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Critical Semiotics provides long overdue answers to questions at the junction of information, meaning and 'affect'. The affective turn in cultural studies has received much attention: a focus on the pre-individual bodily forces, linked to automatic responses, which augment or diminish the body's capacity to act or engage with others. In a world dominated by information, how do things that seem to have diminished meaning or even no meaning still have so much power to affect us, or to carry on our ability to affect the world?
Linguistics and semiotics have been accused of being adrift from the affective turn and not accounting for these visceral forces beneath or generally other from conscious knowing. In this book, Gary Genosko delivers a detailed refutation, with analyses of specific contributions to critical semiotic approaches to meaning and signification. People want to understand how other people are moved and to understand embodied social actions, feelings and passions at the same time as understanding how this takes place. Semiotics must make the affective turn.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. From Information Theory to A-Signifying Semiotics
2. Anti-Semiology
3. Damaged Signs and Floating Signifiers
4. Semiotics of the Info-commodity
5. Obstacle-Signs
6. Tensor Signs
7. Affect and Semiosis
Conclusion
References
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"