381.
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Semiotics:
2002
Max Bonilla
Hermeneutics of the Bible Belt:
Struggles in Interpretation
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382.
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Semiotics:
2002
Index
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383.
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Semiotics:
2002
Helen Richards
Advice to a "Girl":
An Examination of Women's Roles in Jamaica Kincaid's Story
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384.
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Semiotics:
2002
Mary Lowe-Evans
As the Jewel Turns:
"The Speckled Band" and the Empirical Crown Sherlock Holmes and the Politics of Empire
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385.
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Semiotics:
1988
Inge Crosman Wimmers
Figures of Deception in A La Recherche Du Temps Perdu
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386.
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Semiotics:
1988
Mary Libertin
Deely’s Semiotic as Doctrina and Joyce’s “Process of Mind” in Ulysses
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387.
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Semiotics:
1988
Ian C. Henderson
Max Headroom:
Televisual Invention and Edison Carter
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388.
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Semiotics:
1988
Milan Palec
Scenography:
The Semiotics of Violence
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389.
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Semiotics:
1988
David Savan
Peirce and the Trivium
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390.
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Semiotics:
1988
Robert S. Corrington
Faith and the Signs of Expectation
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391.
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Semiotics:
1988
William DeFotis
The “Music” in Barthes’ A Lover's Discourse
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392.
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Semiotics:
1988
Scott Simpkins
Negative Capabilities:
Shifting Signs in Keat’s “Ode to a Nightingale”
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393.
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Semiotics:
1988
Jackson G. Barry
Defining a Narrative Signifier
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394.
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Semiotics:
1988
Felicia E. Kruse
The Interior Castle as Mystical Sign
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395.
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Semiotics:
1988
Steven J. Rosen
Canettian and Freudian Approaches to Swift
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396.
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Semiotics:
1988
David Leatherbarrow
Architecture and the Illusion of Perfect Memory
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397.
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Semiotics:
1988
Martha M. Houle
The Play of Illusion in a Map of Love:
La Carte de Tendre (1654)
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398.
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Semiotics:
1988
Stanley N. Salthe
Modeling Self -Organization
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Foremost among the tasks facing a semiotically-informed modeling of natural open systems is the recognition and representation of self-organization. This forces attention on process, time, and energetics to complement the conventional semiotic bias toward structure, space, and informatics. While self -organization might be captured in numerous operational idioms, we suggest that the fundamentally distinctive formal structures of (a) development (intrinsic predictability) and (b) evolution (unexpected change through change in contextual meaning) constitute thewarp and woof of virtually all observations on systems undergoing change, and that, since these represent complementary orientations toward phenomena generally, interaction of these styles of change within systems can lead to generic models of enormous utility in many fields.
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399.
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Semiotics:
1988
James C. Lundy
She Understood Him: “All Too Well”
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400.
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Semiotics:
1988
Tullio Maranhão
Longing for Presence in the Semiotic of Deception
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