8.38, FYI: Semiotics on the Web

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LINGUIST List:  Vol-8-38. Fri Jan 17 1997. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 8.38, FYI: Semiotics on the Web

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1)
Date:  Tue, 7 Jan 1997 14:22:46 -0800 (PST)
From:  alan harris <vcspc005 at email.csun.edu>
Subject:  for insertion into Bulletin, SEMCOM

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Tue, 7 Jan 1997 14:22:46 -0800 (PST)
From:  alan harris <vcspc005 at email.csun.edu>
Subject:  for insertion into Bulletin, SEMCOM

=============================================
FYI ("for your information")// cheers, ach
=============================================>>>>>>
INFORMATION SOURCES FOR SEMIOTICS ON THE WWW or EMAIL:

Guide to Visual Semiotics:
http://www.louisville.edu/~sxskag01/vis.sem.homepage.html
(Steven Skaggs,Louisville)

Semiotics for Beginners:
http://www.aber.ac.uk/~dgc/semiotic.html

Semiotics information:
http://www.cudenver.edu/~mryder/itc_data/semiotics.h

Meyer's bookmarks:
http://www.uni-kassel.de/fb3/psych/pers/meyer/boma.

CTHEORY:
http://english-server.hss.cmu.edu/ctheory/ctheory.html

Semiotic Review of Books (SRB), edited by Paul Bouissac (French,
Toronto), at the URL
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca:8080/epc/srb/. I quote from the
cover-page:

"The Semiotic Review of Books (SRB, 1990--) is a
multidisciplinary journal publishing exclusively review
articles. It endeavours to monitor those domains in the
Humanities, the Social and the Natural Sciences which bear upon
symbolic and communicative behaviour, cognitive systems and
processes, cultural transmission and innovations, and the study
of information, meaning and signification in all forms.  "This
refereed journal provides its readership with accurate and
substantial accounts of recent books. The critical evaluation of
these works pertains both to their disciplinary relevance and to
their importance for the development of neighbouring
disciplines."

New on SRB is the Cyber Semiotic Institute, "an advanced studies
program in semiotics which will cover a wide range of topics. A
multidisciplinary international Faculty will offer courses
organized in cycles of eight months at the rate of one cyber
lecture per month.  After the end of the cycles, the lectures
and reading lists will remain accessible at the virtual campus
library. Direct interactions between students and instructors
will take place through e-mail.  "Twenty new courses will be put
on line during the first two years of the Cyber Semiotic
Institute (including courses in other languages than English)
and all will be readily accessible in the Institute's archives
after they have been taught on line. Descriptions of the courses
and reading lists will be posted in advance on the virtual
campus of the Cyber Semiotic Institute which is embedded in the
web site of The Semiotic Review of Books."

For more electronic addresses for Semiotics:
cf. dr_charls at msn.com

Peirce Edition Project: cpierce at indycms.iupui.edu

Peirce-L Forum: (Joe Randsell, List moderator)
listproc at unicorn.acs.ttu.edu

Peirce slow reading list: The purpose of this list is to read,
examine, and discuss the writings of C.P. with as much textual
probing as possible.  This list is a supplement to Pierce-L. :
to subscribe, write to majordomo at world.std.com with "subscribe
peirce" in the body (no name).  (Bill Spinks, List moderator:
cspinks at Trinity.Edu)

International Research Group on Semiotics of reasoning (emph. on
Abduction): wirth at informatik.uni_frankfurt.de

Semios-L (Steve Skaggs, List moderator): to subscribe, send a
message to listserv at ulkyvm.louisville.edu with "subscribe
semios-l <your firstname lastname> in the body, no subject
header.

Sixth Congress of IASS: agw at xanum.uam.mx

International Journal for Semiotics of Law (and Bulletin):
m.henket at rgl.ruu.nl

Bulletin of the IASS: gloria.withalm at hermes.hsak.ac.at

The American Journal of Semiotics (TAJS), Editor, Richard
Lanigan:
 rlanigan at siu.edu
(Mail Address: Speech Communication Dept. (6605) Southern
Illinois University Carbondale, Il 62901-6605 U.S.A).

Semiotic Society of America: Terry Prewitt, Executive Director:
TPREWITT at UWF.CC.UWF.EDu

Bulletin of SSA: TOM PUCKETT, editor TPUCKETT at EWU.EDU

SEMCOM (an email list of Commission on Semiotics and
Communication, SCA): (list moderator, Alan Harris)
alan.harris at csun.edu

Commission on Semiotics and Communication, SCA: Frank Macke,
Chair fmacke4sph at aol.com

Bulletin of Commission on Semiotics, Speech Communication
Association: Elliot Gaines, editor: egaines at ashland.edu

Semiotic Circle of California: Irmengard Rauch, Ch.
    Irmengard Rauch irauch at garnet.berkeley.edu

WWW semiotics course
        I'm teaching a course sponsored by the Cyber Semiotic
        Institute on
the World Wide Web called "Critical Semiotics" that readers of
the SEMIOS-L might find of interest.  It is embedded in the web
site of the _Semiotic Review of Books_ located at
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/srb
        I'd appreciate it if you would bring it to the attention
        of
those who also might be interested and I encourage you to send
more your feedback about it at: scotts at jove.acs.unt.edu
        Thanks! Scott Simpkins

CRITICAL SEMIOTICS - Scott Simpkins

Course Outline 1) The lingua franca of semioticians.

Readings: Selections from _Frontiers in Semiotics_, ed.s John
Deely, Brooke Williams, and Felicia Kruse (Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 1986); Umberto Eco, _A Theory of Semiotics_
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1979); John Deely,
_Basics of Semiotics_ (Bloomington: Indiana University Press,
1990).

2) Two extensive critiques of semiotics.  Readings: John
Stewart, _Language as Articulate Contact: Toward A Post-Semiotic
Philosophy of Communication_ (Albany: State University Press of
New York, 1995); Robert Hodge and Gunther Kress, _Social
Semiotics_ (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1988).

3) The implications of codes.  Readings: Roland Barthes, _S/Z:
An Essay_, Trans. Richard Miller (New York: Hill and Wang,
1974).

4) The "problem" of controlling the decoder.  Readings: Umberto
Eco, _The Role of the Reader: Explorations in the Semiotics of
Texts_ (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1979).

5) The limits of "system" and the authority of the encoder.
Readings: Umberto Eco, _The Limits of Interpretation_
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1990); Michel Foucault,
"What is an Author?"; Roland Barthes, "Textual Analysis: Poe's
'Valdemar'" and "From Work to Text."

6) Finite infinite semiosis Readings: Scott Simpkins, "Reeling
in the Signs: Unlimited Semiosis and the Agenda of Literary
Semiotics," _Versus: Quaderni di studi semiotici_ 55/56, 2
(Gennaio-Agosto 1990), 153-173; Eco, _The Open Work_,
trans. Anna Cancogni (Cambridge: Harvard University Press,
1989).

7) Semiotics based on radical polysemy, structuration, and play.
Readings: Roland Barthes, "The Death of the Author";
Jean-Francois Lyotard, _Libidinal Economy_, trans. Iain Hamilton
Grant (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1993); Jacques
Derrida, "'I have forgotten my umbrella.'"

8) Semiotic analysis of James Thurber's short story, "The
Catbird Seat," that draws upon and illustrates the points
discussed in the first seven lectures.  Reading: "The Catbird
Seat."

Semiotic terminology:
collection of semiotic terms (http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/SEMIOTER.html)
authored by  C. Joslyn (http://gwis2.circ.gwu.edu/~joslyn).
Sign :
     A deterministic, functional regularity or stability in a
     system, also sometimes called a sign-function. Something,
     the signifier, stands for something else, the signified, in
     virtue of the sign-function. May be either lawful, proper,
     or symbolic depending on the presence or absence of
     motivation. This is, of course, a very general definition,
     but it is in the tradition of both semiotics and general
     systems theory to think very generally. Contains:
     signifier, signified. Cases: lawful, proper, symbolic.
     Synonym: sign function.

Sign Function :
     Synonym: sign.

Signifier :
     That part of a sign which stands for the signified, for
     example a word or a DNA codon. Synonym: token, sign vehicle.
     Part-of: sign.

Sign Vehicle :
     Synonym: token, signifier.

Signified :
     That part of a sign which is stood for by the signifier.
     Sometimes thought of as the meaning of the signifier.
     Synonym: object, referent, interpretant. Part-of: sign.

Object :
     Synonym: signified, referent, interpretant.

Referent :
     Synonym: signified, object, interpretant.

Motivation :
     The presence of some degree of necessity between the
     signified and siginifier of a sign. Makes the sign proper,
     and complete motivation makes the sign lawful. For example,
     a painting may resemble its subject, making it a proper
     sign. Antonym: arbitrariness.

Arbitrariness :
     The absence of any degree of necessity between the signified
     and siginifier of a sign. Makes the sign symbolic. For
     example, in English we say ``bachelor'' to refer to an
     unmarried man, but since we might just as well say
     ``foobar'', therefore ``bachelor'' is a symbol. Antonym:
     motivation.

Proper Sign :
     A sign which has an intermediate degree of motivation. For
     example, a photograph is a proper sign. isa: sign. Cases:
     icon, index.

Icon :
     A proper sign where the motivation is due to some kind of
     physical resemblance or similarity between the signified and
     siginifier. For example, a map is an icon of its territory.
     isa: proper sign.

Index :
     A proper sign where the motivation is due to some kind of
     physical connection or causal relation between the signified
     and siginifier. For example, smoke is an index of fire. isa:
     proper sign.

Symbol :
     For CS Peirce, a sign where the sign function is a
     conventional rule or coding. The operation of a symbol is
     dependent on a process of interpretation. isa: sign.

Rule :
     A functional regularity or stability which is conventional,
     and thus necessary within the system which manifests it, but
     within a wider universe it is contingent, or arbitrary. For
     example, if we wish to refer to an unmarried man in English,
     then we must say ``bachelor'', even though ``bachelor'' is a
     symbol. Synonym: code, semantic relation. Antonym: law.

Semantic Relation :
     Synonym: code, rule.

Code :
     The establishment of a conventional rule-following relation
     in a symbol, represented as a deterministic, functional
     relation between two sets of entities. Synonym: semantic
     relation, rule.

Interpret :
     To take something for something else in virtue of a coding.

Interpreter :
     That entity, typically a human subject, which interprets the
     sign vehicle of a symbol.

Interpretant :
     For Peirce, that which followed semantically from the
     process of interpretation. Synonym: signified, object,
     referent.

Law :
     A regularity or stability which is necessary for all
     systems, and thus immutable as a fact of nature. The
     necessity of the relation is called the sign's motivation.
     Antonym: rule.
 Esa Pikkarainen   (WPegasus) epikkara at ktk.oulu.fi
 University of Oulu                or   esa.pikkarainen at oulu.fi


       ===============================================================
       Alan C. Harris, Ph. D.          TELNOS: main off:  818-677-2853
       Professor, Communication/Linguistics  direct off:  818-677-2874
       Speech Communication Department
       California State University, Northridge     home:  818-366-3165
       SPCH CSUN                                    FAX:  818-677-2663
       Northridge, CA 91330-8257 INTERNET  email: ALAN.HARRIS at CSUN.EDU
                 WWW homepage: http://www.csun.edu/~vcspc005
       ===============================================================

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