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Displaying: 121-140 of 712 documents

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121. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Frank J. Macke Quintilian’s Instituto Oratoria and Postmodern Pedagogy
122. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Daniel Robichaud Interaction as Text: A Semiotic Look at an Organizing Process
123. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Eugen Baer Ecce Homo: How Semiotics Becomes What It is
124. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Roman Guadreault Formalization: A Tool for Semiotics
125. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Leticia Iliana Underwood Homage to Roman Jakobson - ArbolAdentro: "Entre lo que y veo digo ..." By Octavo paz
126. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Hong Wang Cultural Shades of Grice's Cooperative Discourse Principle
127. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
Mirian Zielinski Painting: A Phenomenological Semiotics of Art and Visual Perception
128. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
Jacqueline M. Layng The Animated Woman: The Powerless Beauty of Disney Heroines from Snow White to Jasmine
129. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
Sanja Garic-Komnenic A Comparative Analysis of the Functions of Film and Theatre Languages
130. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
Fernando Andacht Those Powerful Materialized Dreams: Peirce on Icons and the Human Imagination
131. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
Wililam S. Lewis Harry Smith's Filmwork and the Possibility of a Universal Symbology
132. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
Anna Makolkin Flags and Flagomania: The Visual Necromantic Pandemia of the Twentieth Century
133. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
Sanda Monica Tataram Visual Computer Programming: Semiotic and Cognitive Aspects
134. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
Barry King On Semiotic Determinism and the Visual Sign
135. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
Elliot Gaines The Semiotics of Media Images from Independence Day and September 11, 2001
136. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
W. Stephen Croddy The Semiotic Anaysis of Analytic Cubism
137. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
Elizabeth C. Hirschman Legends in Our Own Time: How Motion Pictures and Television Shows Fulfill the Functions of Myth
138. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 17 > Issue: 3
Eduardo Neiva An Argument Against the Conventionalist Interpretation of Images
139. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/4
Clarisse Zimra Can the Empire Really Write Back: Maximin’s Unbounded Narrative
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This essay examines the ways in which Daniel Maximin, a Guadeloupean writer, tackles the work of history and memory that constitutes the ethical imperative of postcolonial writers in the African diaspora. From Proust to Joyce, Camus to Blanchot, Maximin “riffs” on the modernist canon to produce a truly hybrid hermeneutics. In three inter-connected works that share characters and circumstances and owe much to Eco’s concept of the “open work”, Maximin crafts one giant unbounded, untelelogical self-referential narrative that shall heal the diasporic obsession with the all too real fractures of colonial history.
140. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 18 > Issue: 1/4
Sid Sondergard Mapping the Lovecraft Idiolect: Iterative Structures and Autosemiotization as Reading Strategies
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Towards reassessing and reconciling some of the conflicted readings of H. P. Lovecraft’s writings, Sondergard proposes that the author be read through the lens of his own idiolect rather than through interpretive systems constructed from referents external to Lovecraft’s often xenophobically self-referential perceptions. Modeling a semiotic system extrapolated from analysis of Lovecraft’s canon as well as of his life, the essay proceeds to employ it to reexamine “Herbert West—Reanimator,” a story that has been cited as evidence of the author’s racism.