Semiotic Terminology
Semiotics, or semiology, is the
study of signs, symbols, and signification. It is the study of how meaning is
created, not what it is. Below are some brief definitions of semiotic terms,
beginning with the smallest unit of meaning and proceeding towards the larger
and more complex:
Signifier: any material thing that
signifies, e.g., words on a page, a facial expression, an image.
Signified: the concept that a signifier
refers to.
Together,
the signifier and signified make up the
Sign: the smallest unit of meaning.
Anything that can be used to communicate (or to tell a lie).
Symbolic (arbitrary) signs: signs
where the relation between signifier and signified is purely conventional and
culturally specific, e.g., most words.
Iconic signs: signs where the signifier
resembles the signified, e.g., a picture.
Indexical Signs: signs where the
signifier is caused by the signified, e.g., smoke signifies fire.
Denotation: the most basic or literal
meaning of a sign, e.g., the word "rose" signifies a particular kind
of flower.
Connotation: the secondary, cultural
meanings of signs; or "signifying signs," signs that are used as
signifiers for a secondary meaning, e.g., the word "rose" signifies
passion.
Metonymy: a kind of connotation where in
one sign is substituted for another with which it is closely associated, as in
the use of Washington for the United States government or of the sword for
military power.
Synecdoche: a kind of connotation in which
a part is used for the whole (as hand for sailor).
Collections
of related connotations can be bound together either by
Paradigmatic relations: where
signs get meaning from their association with other signs,
or by
Syntagmatic relations: where
signs get meaning from their sequential order, e.g., grammar or the sequence of
events that make up a story.
Myths: a combination of paradigms and
syntagms that make up an oft-told story with elaborate cultural associations,
e.g., the cowboy myth, the romance myth.
Codes: a combination of semiotic
systems, a supersystem, that function as general maps of meaning, belief
systems about oneself and others, which imply views and attitudes about how the
world is and/or ought to be. Codes are where semiotics and social structure and
values connect.
Ideologies: codes that reinforce or are
congruent with structures of power. Ideology works largely by creating forms of
"common sense," of the taken-for-granted in everyday life.
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