41.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
2 >
Issue: 4
Joseph H. Smith (ed.): Psychoanalysis and Language. Psychiatry and the Humanities
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42.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
2 >
Issue: 4
Mihai Nadin
T. K. Seung: Structuralism and Hermeneutics
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43.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
2 >
Issue: 4
Mary Arensberg
Jonathan Culler: The Pursuit of Signs: Semiotics, Literature, Deconstruction
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44.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
2 >
Issue: 4
Bronislava Volek
Květoslav Chvatík: Tschechoslovakischer Strukturalismus: Theorie und Geschichte
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45.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
2 >
Issue: 4
Patrick Imbert
Julia Kristeva: Desire in Language: A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art
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46.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
2 >
Issue: 4
Roger Joseph
F. Allan Hanson (ed.): Studies in Symbolism and Cultural Communication
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47.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
22 >
Issue: 1/4
Grzegorz A. Kleparski, Waldemar Janusz Drążek
John Durham Peters’s History of the Idea of Communication
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48.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
22 >
Issue: 1/4
Karen J. Greenberg
The Architecture of Social Stratification
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49.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
24 >
Issue: 1/3
Paul Cobley
Introduction to Biosemiotics:
The New Biological Synthesis
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50.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
24 >
Issue: 1/3
Peter Harries-Jones
Social Anthropology Volume 12, Part Two, June 2004; Special Issue:
“Anthropology After Darwin”
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51.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
24 >
Issue: 1/3
Merja Bauters
The Whole Creature:
Complexity, Biosemiotics and the Evolution of Culture
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52.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
28 >
Issue: 3/4
Irene Portis-Winner
Review of Susan Petrilli's Sign Crossroads in Global Perspectives: Semioethics and Responsibility
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This commendable study of semiotics in all its dimensions in time and space ambitiously suggests certain modern principles that should have universal application. The global perspective interrelates the concepts discussed, defies boundaries, and, departing from a cenoscopic vision of the communicative pre-life universe, reaches to the most contemporary issues of ethics, responsibility, otherness, and agapé. The ambiguity of identity, prediction, meaning, and their negative and positive consequences are scrutinized, and are all playing their part in the building a hopeful (post)modern world.
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53.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
3 >
Issue: 1
John N. Duvall
Authoritarian Fictions:
The Ideological Novel As a Literary Genre
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54.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
3 >
Issue: 2
Susan Noakes
Figures of Literary Discourse
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55.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
3 >
Issue: 2
Robert Con Davis
Literature and Psychoanalysis
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56.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
30 >
Issue: 1/2
Donald R. Frohlich
Biology, Peirce, and Biosemiotics:
Commentaires 'Cénoscopic' d'un Biologiste
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57.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
30 >
Issue: 3/4
John Deely
The Cenoscopic Science of Signs:
Reflections on Cornelis de Waal’s Book Peirce: A Guide for the Perplexed
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58.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
4 >
Issue: 1/2
Jackson G. Barry
Great Reckonings in Little Rooms:
On the Phenomenology of Theater
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59.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
4 >
Issue: 1/2
Thomas A. Sebeok
Handbuch der Semiotik
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60.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
4 >
Issue: 1/2
Jay L. Lemke
Themes and Texts:
Toward a Poetics of Expressiveness
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