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Semiotics for Beginners by Daniel Chandler

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<strong>Semiotics</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Beginners</strong> <strong>by</strong> <strong>Daniel</strong> <strong>Chandler</strong><br />

• Signification: In Saussurean semiotics, the term signification refers to the relationship between the signifier and<br />

the signified. It is also variously used to refer to:<br />

o the defining function of signs (i.e. that they signify, or 'stand <strong>for</strong>' something other than themselves);<br />

o the process of signifying (semiosis);<br />

o signs as part of an overall semiotic system;<br />

o what is signified (meaning);<br />

o the reference of language to reality;<br />

o a representation.<br />

See also: Modes of relationship, Orders of signification, Semiosis, Value<br />

• Signified (signifié): For Saussure, the signified was one of the two parts of the sign (which was indivisible except<br />

<strong>for</strong> analytical purposes). Saussure's signified is the mental concept represented <strong>by</strong> the signifier (and is not a<br />

material thing). This does not exclude the reference of signs to physical objects in the world as well as to abstract<br />

concepts and fictional entities, but the signified is not itself a referent in the world (in contrast to Peirce's object). It<br />

is common <strong>for</strong> subsequent interpreters to equate the signified with 'content' (matching the <strong>for</strong>m of the signifier in<br />

the familiar dualism of '<strong>for</strong>m and content'). See also: Modes of relationship, Referent, Saussurean model of the<br />

sign, Signifier, Transcendent(al) signified<br />

• Signified, transcendent: See Transcendent signified<br />

• Signifier (signifiant): For Saussure, this was one of the two parts of the sign (which was indivisible except <strong>for</strong><br />

analytical purposes). In the Saussurean tradition, the signifier is the <strong>for</strong>m which a sign takes. For Saussure<br />

himself, in relation to linguistic signs, this meant a non-material <strong>for</strong>m of the spoken word - 'a sound-image' ('the<br />

psychological imprint of the sound, the impression it makes on our senses'). Subsequent semioticians have<br />

treated it as the material (or physical) <strong>for</strong>m of the sign - something which can be seen, heard, felt, smelt or tasted<br />

(also called the sign vehicle). See also: Absent signifiers, Empty or floating signifier, Imaginary signifier, Modes of<br />

relationship, Primacy of signifier, Representamen, Saussurean model of the sign, Sign vehicle, Signified<br />

• Signifier, imaginary: See Imaginary signifier<br />

• Signifying practices: These are the meaning-making behaviours in which people engage (including the production<br />

and reading of texts) following particular conventions or rules of construction and interpretation. Social<br />

semioticians focus on signifying practices in specific socio-cultural contexts - on parole rather than langue, and<br />

tend towards diachronic rather than synchronic analysis - in contrast to structuralist semioticians who focus on the<br />

<strong>for</strong>mal structure of sign systems. Realists criticize what they see as the reduction of reality <strong>by</strong> 'conventionalists' to<br />

nothing more than signifying practices. See also: Representational codes, Interpretative community, Social<br />

semiotics<br />

• Simple sign: A sign which does not contain any other signs, in contrast to a complex sign. See also: Complex<br />

sign, Sign<br />

• Simulacrum: This was Baudrillard's term (borrowed from Plato); 'simulacra' are 'copies without originals' - the<br />

main <strong>for</strong>m in which we encounter texts in postmodern culture. More broadly, he used the term to refer to a<br />

representation which bears no relation to any reality. See also: Digital signs, Empty signifier, Tokens and types<br />

• Single articulation, codes with: Semiotic codes have either single articulation, double articulation or no articulation.<br />

Codes with single articulation have either first articulation or second articulation only. Codes with first articulation<br />

only consist of signs - meaningful elements which are systematically related to each other - but there is no second<br />

articulation to structure these signs into minimal, non-meaningful elements. Where the smallest recurrent<br />

structural unit in a code is meaningful, the code has first articulation only. The system of related traffic signs (with<br />

red borders, triangular or circular shapes, and standardized, stylized images) is a code with first articulation only.<br />

Other semiotic codes lacking double articulation have second articulation only. These consist of signs which have<br />

specific meanings which are not derived from their elements. They are divisible only into figurae (minimal<br />

functional units). The most powerful code with second articulation only is binary code: this has only 2 minimal<br />

functional units, 0 and 1, but these units can be combined to generate numbers, letters and other signs. See also:<br />

Articulation, Double articulation, First articulation, Second articulation, Unarticulated codes<br />

• Sites of struggle: See Constructivism, Reality, Representation, Social semiotics<br />

• Social codes: Whilst all semiotic codes are in a broad sense social codes, social codes can also be seen as<br />

<strong>for</strong>ming a major sub-group of codes, alongside textual codes and interpretative codes. Social codes in this<br />

narrower sense concern our tacit knowledge of the social world and include unwritten codes such as bodily<br />

codes, commodity codes and behavioural codes. See also: Code<br />

• Social construction: See Constructivism

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