The Motivated Sign: Iconicity in Language and Literature 2This volume, a sequel to Form Miming Meaning (1999), offers a selection of papers given at the second international symposium on iconicity (Amsterdam 1999). In the light of semiotic, linguistic and literary theory the studies gathered here investigate how iconicity works on all levels of language, in literary texts and other forms of verbal discourse. They investigate, among other subjects, the semiotic foundations of iconicity, the role played by iconicity in language evolution and in the way words are positioned syntactically. Special consideration is given to the iconic nature of metaphor and the 'mise en abyme', to iconically motivated punctuation and other typographic matters such as the manipulation of colour, fonts and spacing in advertising and in poetry. Other studies show how iconicity influences Shakespeare's rhetoric, the structural design of Margaret Atwood's writings and the changing fashions in fictional landscape description. Thus, these analyses of 'the motivated sign' represent yet another strong challenge to Saussure's dogma of arbitrariness (Jakobson). |
讀者評論 - 撰寫評論
我們找不到任何評論。
內容
PART I | 4 |
PART III | 7 |
Semiotic foundations of iconicity in language and literature | 17 |
The semiotics of the miseenabyme | 29 |
Icons anaphors and the evolution of language | 55 |
The iconicity of English gl words | 69 |
The case of the cucurbits | 89 |
Iconicity | 109 |
Iconoclasm and iconicity in seventeenthcentury English poetry | 211 |
The English S and OFgenitives | 229 |
The position of the adjective in Old English from an iconic | 249 |
Present participles as iconic expressions | 277 |
A note on the iconic force of rhetorical figures | 305 |
The emergence of experiential iconicity and spatial perspective | 323 |
Iconic dimensions in Margaret Atwoods poetry and prose | 351 |
367 | |
Ellipsis marks in a historical perspective | 135 |
Iconic functions of long and short lines | 157 |
Motive and method in miming | 189 |
377 | |
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
according adjective advertising alliteration appear arbitrary association become beginning body called communication concerned connection construction context contrast course create cucurbits death device discussion elements emotion Event example existence expressed fact fiction Figure function further hand head human iconicity idea illustration imitation important indices instance interesting interpretant kind landscape language less light linguistic linked literary literature London look marks meaning metaphors miming mirror mise en abyme movement names narrative nature noun novel object occurs Old English participle particular passage perspective phrase play poem poetry position possible present Press principle reader reference reflects relationship represent rhetorical seems seen semantic semiotic sense sentence sequence short shows similar sound space structure suggests symbolic syntactic thought translation University verb verbal visual words