Difference between revisions of "Semiotics (Discussion)"
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#*What are the denotations and connotations of the ''Wonder Years''' opening montage? | #*What are the denotations and connotations of the ''Wonder Years''' opening montage? | ||
#*#Denotations: List/identify as many of the images as you can. | #*#Denotations: List/identify as many of the images as you can. | ||
+ | #*#*John & Yoko in bed | ||
+ | #*#*Hippie bus (Wavy Gravy--Merry Pranksters) | ||
+ | #*#*1968 Olympics black power salute | ||
+ | #*#*RFK | ||
+ | #*#*MLK | ||
+ | #*#*Moon landing | ||
+ | #*#*"miracle Mets" | ||
+ | #*#*Vietnam War combat images | ||
+ | #*#*Vietnam War protest images: Kent State | ||
+ | #*#*1973 Munich Olympics: Terrorists | ||
+ | #*#*Nixon and Agnew | ||
+ | #*#*School kids | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
#Ellen Seiter, in ''Channels of Discourse'', writes, "The picture [of Fangface] itself is a syntagm. ... In the paradigmatic dimension the options are a pair of categories nature/culture (or animal/human...), which is the source of the image's meaning." She continues, "...Hodge and Trip have introduced the binary opposition (nature/culture) and proceeded to organize the elements of the television image into paradigmatic sets." | #Ellen Seiter, in ''Channels of Discourse'', writes, "The picture [of Fangface] itself is a syntagm. ... In the paradigmatic dimension the options are a pair of categories nature/culture (or animal/human...), which is the source of the image's meaning." She continues, "...Hodge and Trip have introduced the binary opposition (nature/culture) and proceeded to organize the elements of the television image into paradigmatic sets." | ||
#*List three or four "paradigmatic sets" in the "Prophecy Girl" episode of ''Buffy the Vampire Slayer''. Refer to your list of the episode's scenes to provide specific examples. | #*List three or four "paradigmatic sets" in the "Prophecy Girl" episode of ''Buffy the Vampire Slayer''. Refer to your list of the episode's scenes to provide specific examples. |
Revision as of 20:11, 9 October 2012
Group 3
- What would be two examples of C. S. Pierce's "indexical sign" (aka, index) that are not mentioned in the textbooks?
Group 4
- What would be two examples of C. S. Pierce's "iconic sign" (aka, icon) that are not mentioned in the textbooks?
Group 1
- What would be two examples of C. S. Pierce's "symbolic sign" that are not mentioned in the textbooks?
Group 2
- What would be one example of syntagmatic structure that is not mentioned in the textbooks?
All groups
- Define "denotation" and "connotation." What does semiotician Roland Barthes mean by the term, "myth"?
- What are the denotations and connotations of the Wonder Years' opening montage?
- Denotations: List/identify as many of the images as you can.
- John & Yoko in bed
- Hippie bus (Wavy Gravy--Merry Pranksters)
- 1968 Olympics black power salute
- RFK
- MLK
- Moon landing
- "miracle Mets"
- Vietnam War combat images
- Vietnam War protest images: Kent State
- 1973 Munich Olympics: Terrorists
- Nixon and Agnew
- School kids
- Denotations: List/identify as many of the images as you can.
- What are the denotations and connotations of the Wonder Years' opening montage?
- Ellen Seiter, in Channels of Discourse, writes, "The picture [of Fangface] itself is a syntagm. ... In the paradigmatic dimension the options are a pair of categories nature/culture (or animal/human...), which is the source of the image's meaning." She continues, "...Hodge and Trip have introduced the binary opposition (nature/culture) and proceeded to organize the elements of the television image into paradigmatic sets."
- List three or four "paradigmatic sets" in the "Prophecy Girl" episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Refer to your list of the episode's scenes to provide specific examples.
- Are there any "paradigmatic sets" to be found in the Wonder Years montage?
- List two strength(s) of semiotic/structuralist analysis. List two weaknesses of this approach (no, a difficult vocabulary does not count).
Bibliography
- Jeremy G. Butler, Television: Critical Methods and Applications (NY: Routledge, 2011).
- Ellen Seiter, "Semiotics, Structuralism and Television," in Robert C. Allen, Channels of Discourse, Reassembled, second edition (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1992).