New studies in multimodality : conceptual and methodological elaborations
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New studies in multimodality : conceptual and methodological elaborations
Bloomsbury Academic, 2019
1st paperback ed.
- : pbk.
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Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Multimodality is one of the most popular and influential semiotic theories for analysing media. However, the application and conceptual anchoring of multimodality often remains geographically and disciplinarily grounded within local systems of thought. New Studies in Multimodality combines the expertise of multimodalists from around the globe, offering novel readings and applications of central concepts in multimodality and inviting innovative synergies between previously disparate schools.
Combining perspectives from the most actively developing traditions of theory and research, this book progresses from classic concepts to more empirically and practice-motivated contributions. Contributors engage in mutual dialogue to present new theoretical perspectives and compelling applications to a variety of old and new media. Expanding the basis and scope of multimodality, this volume shows awareness and experience of this field in many disciplines and illustrates how versatile, pervasive and relevant it is for studying today's communication phenomena.
Table of Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
Preface
1. Introduction: Rethinking Multimodality in the 21st Century, Ognyan Seizov (SRH Hochschule Berlin, Germany) and Janina Wildfeuer (University of Bremen, Germany)
2. Vectors, Morten Boeriis (University of Southern Denmark, Denmark) and Theo van Leeuwen (University of Technology Sydney, Australia)
3. The 'Same' Meaning Across Modes? Some Reflections on Transduction as Translation, Soren Vigild Poulsen (University of Southern Denmark, Denmark)
4. Modeling Multimodal Stratification, Morten Boeriis (University of Southern Denmark, Denmark)
5. Understanding Multimodal Meaning Making: Theories of Multimodality in the Light of Reception Studies, Hans-Jurgen Bucher (University of Trier, Germany)
6. Approaching Multimodality from the Functional-Pragmatic Perspective, Arne Krause (University of Hamburg, Germany)
7. Audio Description: A Practical Application of Multimodal Studies, Christopher Taylor (University of Trieste, Italy)
8. Multimodal Translation Research: Teaching Visual Texts, Victor Lim Fei (Ministry of Education, Singapore) and Serene Tan (Ministry of Education, Singapore)
9. 'Wikiganda': Detecting Bias in Multimodal Wikipedia Entries, Hartmut Wessler, Christoph Kilian Theil (University of Mannheim, Germany), Heiner Stuckenschmidt (University of Mannheim, Germany), Angelika Storrer (University of Mannheim, Germany) and Marc Debus (University of Mannheim, Germany)
10. Linking Corporate Past, Present, and Future: The Multimodal Communication of Coram's Heritage Identity, Carmen Maier (Aarhus University, Denmark)
11. The 'Bologna Process' as a Territory of Knowledge: A Contextualization Analysis, Yannik Porsche (Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany)
12. Afterword: Towards a New Discipline of Multimodality, Janina Wildfeuer (University of Bremen, Germany) and Ognyan Seizov (SRH Hochschule Berlin, Germany)
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