social semiotics
TRANSCRIPT
Chapter 14
Social SemioticsConstructing Stuff in Everyday Life
Phillip Vannini
ID 501 – Kıvılcım Çınar
Content
Social semiotics
Structural semiotics versus social semiotics
Three circles of social semiotics
Everyday reality for social semiotics
Socio-semiotic research strategies
Dimensions of social semiotic analysis
Keywords
Social semiotics, structural semiotics, semiotic analysis,
unnoticed stuff, everyday life perspective, signifier,
signified, semiotic power, arbitrariness, ideological complex,
discourse, genre, style, modality, semiotic rules, and
semiotic transformation
Phillip Vannini
He discusses the significance of social semiotics as an
everyday life perspective.
He explains social semiotics as a body of critical and
interpretive theory.
He examines social semiotics as a research strategy.
He defines dimensions of social semiotic analysis with van
Leeuwen approach.
Stuff. The world is full of it.(Despite our lives being so full of stuff, we know
very little about the significance of our day to day interaction with it.)
We are all supposed to know that the meaning of the object
lies in its obvious function; however we never question
them.
For the studies of unnoticed stuff, he reviews the analytical
perspective known as ‘social semiotics’.
Social semiotics:
studies the ways in which people use semiotic resources both
to produce communicative artifacts and to interpret them
in the context of specific social situations and practices
compares and contrasts semiotic modes
studies ways in which semiotic resources are regulated in
specific locations and practices
practice of analysis and observations to discover new
semiotic resources
Reads all artifacts as texts
Does not study what signs stands for but how it is used
Why use social semiotics to understand stuff?
Social semiotics is best equipped for understanding different
modes of expressing meaning through all the senses. (EL stuffs –
non linguistic level)
Social semiotics is particularly useful in making mute mundane
objects speak:in bringing their unnoticed significance and
functionality to light.
Social semiotics is highly eclectic and it can be used easily in
combinations with a broad variety of E.L sociological perspectives.
Social semiotics focuses on meanings in context and therefore on
situated practices of communication , rather than merely on
abstract, structural and formal grammar-like associations.
As a semiotic theory
Saussure offered a 'dyadic' or two-part model of the sign. He
defined a sign as being composed of:
a 'signifier' (signifiant) - the form which the sign takes;
and
the 'signified' (signifié) - the concept it represents.
Three schools (circles) of social semiotics
Sdyney Semiotics Circle (Roland Barthes, Micheal Halliday’s functional grammer tradition) Grammer of language is not based in unchangeable codes or
rules but rather in a system of resources for making meanings.
European – Critical Discourse Analysis Group (Faucauldion version) Power and meaning are inseparable. Discourse is shaped by
unequal arrangements of power. It is a field that is concerned with studying and analyzing written
and spoken texts to reveal the discursive sources of power, dominance, inequality and bias.
North American Network influenced by the sociologists who have combined elements of
social semiotics with the post Marxist, the pragmatist and symbolic interactionist.
Structural Semiotics And Social Semiotics Structural Semiotics ; signifiers refer to mental concepts not
to actual material things.
Structural semioticians emphasize the importance of structures because they believe that the interrelations of semiotic systems hold the codes or rules “that govern the conventions of signification, whether these be in kinship, etiquette, mathematics, or art”
Structural semioticians conducting ethnographic work, therefore, are primarily interested in understanding how signs and structures of semiotic rules make people, rather than in understanding how people make, use, and renegotiate semiotic rules.
Structuralist semioticians believe that meaning arises out of
a structure of oppositions.
from the linguistic side (e.g: skirt – shirt, short, squirt)
from the cultural side ( binary position of values, social and moral norms)
(e.g: Cold vs. Hot, Happy vs. Sad, Sleep vs. Awake)
Social semioticians reject, instead, all forms of structural
determinism.
Social semiotics attributes meaning to power instead of
merely attributing power to meaning
Structuralist Semioticians look for meaning in deep
structures of semantic associations and differences.
agree that languages express or represent thoughts.
tend to focus on language and its deep structures of signification informing speech.
concentrate on synchronic associations (one point in time)
Social Semioticians look for meaning in social-
meaning -making practices and in the contexts where specific practices occur.
suggest that the social organization of thinking shapes both language itself and other, multimodal,forms of communication.
tend to focus on instances of speech and their effects on larger linguistic order.
concentrate on the importance of diachrony (semiotic transformations over time)
rejecting the idea of arbitrariness
productive semiotic power
does not only weigh on us as a force that says no it traverses and produces things, it induces pleasure, forms
knowledge, produce discourse.
power struggles over competing definitions
of meaning stable social organization
they exercise their force by successfully imposing their ideological complexes.
Ideological complex
exists to sustain relationships of both power and
solidarity.
represents the social order as simultaneously serving the
interests of both dominant and subordinate.
does not determine what people will do, feel or think at any
given moment.
is not forever lasting.
For Social Semiotics
everyday reality
Grammar of communication
Particularities of context
Social and agentic
intend the system of rules inscribed into texts and acts of communications(Grammar of visual)
Context logonomic systems prescribe and proscribe the conditions under which meanings are produced, distributed and consumed.
the existence of context-bound rules and conditioning imposed upon meaning by the grammar and physicality of signs. users may be able to subvert the meaning either accidentally or intentionally.
Socio-semiotic research strategies
Making an inventory of semiotic resources.
Data generally include semioticized and unsemioticized empirical
material.
Semioticized: consist of motivated traces of human communicative behaviour such
as films, television series, sculpture and bodily expressions.
Unsemioticized: materials which haven’t been created by human practice.
Social semioticians have developed a keen interest and refined
their conceptual vocabulary to best understand multimodality
rather than pure linguistic discursivity alone. Most socio-semiotic
analyses deal with multimodal material.
Social semioticians are in the business of:
Inventorizing semiotic resources and investigating how they
are used in specific contexts
Discover and develop new semiotic resources and new ways
of using them.
Inventorizing different types of rules, taken up in different
ways in different contexts
Analyzing the various ways semiotic resources are used
through analysis of discourse, genre, style, and
modality in which they are used.
Discourse
what of communication
a talk, whether spoken or expressed through written word.
an expression of a socially constructed body of language.
Discourses work by presenting and evaluating social
practices by regulating activities, the manners in which
activities are carried out, what actors can participate, how
they ought to present their roles and identities.
Genre
how of communication
speech acts (speech acts that construct realities of their own, such
as apologies, declarations of intent, requests, offers and demands.
Social semioticians have investigated a wide variety of genres,
focusing for the most part on multimodal genres.
Van Leeuwen has examined in great detail the genre of media interviews,
Cranny-Francis has examined representation of gender in popular fiction.
Socio-semiotic analysis of genre reveals that genres format
experiences and practices by laying out shared expectations on
the form, and therefore on the potential for meaning, of semiotic
resources.
Style
Styles are broad signifying systems which link together smaller parts,
turning them into concrete wholes.
individual style
social style
lifestyle
individual difference
self-expression
impression management
what people do as a
result of group
membership
is a combination of
both individual and
social lifestyles.
Modality
Modality is a measure of how true a representation is, in
terms of both degree of truth and the mechanisms through
which an impression of truth is achieved.
Modality can be either linguistic or non-linguistic ( visual,
abstract, sonsory and naturalistic)
Social Semiotic Concepts
Semiotic Transformation
Semiotic Rules
Semiotic Functions
Semiotic Multimodality
Semiotic Transformation Meanings and logonomic systems have changed over time.
the need for new resources new ways of using existing resourcese.g: look at the example of fashion, certain contexts may be more or less open to change, and certain properties of those contexts may facilitate or prevent change. (Vannini 2008)
Social semioticians have examined semiotic transformations in a wide variety of settings. From technology side, Scollon have reflected how the internet has
changed the sense of place in a small Alaskan town. Kress has looked at the phonetic emergence of words and studied
the significance of changes in spelling over time. Annemarie Jutel has analysed the changing meanings of fatness
throughout history.
Semiotic Rules Important for both structuralist and social semiotics. Rules (written or unwritten) are made by people. (can be
changed) difficult process as they become institutionalized and protected.
Lexicon Rules Grammar Rules
stipulate what signifiers refer to.
e.g: Western society, artificially tanned skin connotes such things as physical appeal, a relatively affluent lifestyle and youth.
Stipulate how coherent messages can be built up with smaller semiotic resources.
e.g: A tanned body is to be presented as a complex multimodal text which expressing its muscular fitness, sense of fashion, and other resources connoting a coherent lifestyle.
Semiotic Multimodality
To understand human communication in all of it forms,
social scientists must become able to relinquish methods
that rely on the collection of words.
The social semiotic attention to multimodal traces of
human behaviour especially acquires a particular
importance when we think of how everyday life is
increasingly mediated by a plurality of media of
communication, and how social interaction is more and
more surrounded by and enabled through deceivingly
simple and yet so important ‘stuff’.
Semiotic FunctionsExample of semiotic function Instrumental function – its most immediate, obvious, and taken
for granted function. Regulative function – its strategic use in the house. (Placing it in
the kitchen or on the table in the living room) Informative function – as a semiotic resource (type of meal which
will be served) Interpersonal function – absense of forks enables people to feed
with their hands off a common plate. Personal function – a sign of a class status (fork comes from
university cafeteria) Heuristic function – it can be used to find out things. (poking of
fish to understand whether the fish is cooked or not.