384 Pages 50 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    384 Pages 50 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This fourth edition of the bestselling textbook, now available in print, eBook, and audiobook, has been fully updated, continuing to provide a concise introduction to the key concepts of semiotics in accessible and jargon-free language.

    Demystifying what is a complex, highly interdisciplinary field, key questions covered include: what are signs and codes? What can semiotics teach us about representation and reality? What tools does it offer for analysing texts and cultural practices? The fourth edition of Semiotics: The Basics focuses in particular on its application to communication and cultural studies. It has been extensively revised and extended, with an entirely new section on cognitive semiotics, many more illustrations, and a new glossary.

    With updates to theory, further examples, and suggestions for review and further reading, this must-have resource is both the ideal introductory text and an essential reference guide for students at all levels of language and communication, media, and cultural studies.

    List of illustrations

    Preface

    Acknowledgements

    Introduction

    Definitions

    Relation to philosophy and linguistics

    Structuralism

    Why study semiotics?

    1 Models

    The Saussurean model

    Arbitrariness

    The relational system

    The Peircean model

    Jakobson’s model

    Sign relations

    Symbolic relations

    Iconic relations

    Indexical relations

    The case of photography

    Mixed modes

    Types and tokens

    Rematerializing the sign

    Hjelmslev’s model

    Reflections

    Further reading

    2 Realities

    Categorization

    Language, thought, and reality

    Referentiality

    Referentiality

    Modality

    The word is not the thing

    Empty signifiers

    Reflections

    Further reading

    3 Structures

    Horizontal and vertical axes

    The paradigmatic dimension

    The commutation test

    Oppositions

    Markedness

    Deconstruction

    Conceptual alignment

    The semiotic square

    The syntagmatic dimension

    Spatial relations

    Sequential relations

    Structural reduction

    Langue and parole

    Reflections

    Further reading

    4 Codes

    The language model

    Digital and analogue codes

    Typologies

    Social codes

    Textual codes

    Genre

    Aesthetic realisms

    Invisible editing

    Interpretive codes

    Ways of reading

    Codification

    Limitations

    Reflections

    Further reading

    5 Ways of meaning

    Rhetorical tropes

    Metaphor

    Metonymy

    Synecdoche

    Irony

    Master tropes

    Denotation and connotation

    Myth

    Reflections

    Further reading

    6 Interactions

    Models of communication

    Context and relevance

    Communicative functions

    The positioning of the subject

    Modes of address

    Intertextuality

    Problematizing authorship

    No text is an island

    Intratextuality

    Textual framing

    Reflections

    Further reading

    7 Perspectives

    Structuralist semiotics

    Poststructuralist semiotics

    The return of Saussure

    Social semiotics

    Cognitive semiotics

    Cartesian dualism

    Semiotic stances

    Mental representation

    Embodiment

    Methodologies

    An ecological and multimodal approach

    Reflections

    Further reading

    Going further

    Glossary

    References

    Index

    Biography

    Daniel Chandler is an Emeritus faculty member at Aberystwyth University and a consultant in marketing semiotics. He is also the senior compiler of A Dictionary of Media and Communication (3rd edition, Oxford University Press, 2020) and A Dictionary of Social Media (Oxford University Press, 2016).

    Praise for Semiotics: The Basics:

    ‘A very useful book, not only for those who wish to find out about semiotics, but also for those interested in finding out how language or any other sign system is far from being a neutral medium of communication.’ — Juan A. Prieto-Pablos, University of Seville, Spain

    ‘The book is well written and up-to-date, without unnecessary verbosity or jargon, and yet reflects the complexity of the field and its problems.’ — Journal of Pragmatics

    ‘It is no small task to present semiotics in a manner that makes it accessible to the beginning student, and Chandler achieves this, describing difficult concepts clearly and thoroughly.’ — Donald J. Cunningham, Indiana University, USA

    ‘This book is, at once, highly accessible, extremely interesting, encyclopedic in scope, and authoritative. Highly recommended for all courses involving semiotics and its applications to media, culture and society.’ — Arthur Asa Berger, San Francisco State University, USA

    Praise for the fourth edition:

    ‘Daniel Chandler’s Semiotics is thorough, well organized, and well written. Provocative and informative, its range, depth, and erudition should make it of interest, not only to philosophers and theorists of art, language, and culture, but to anyone interested in the relation of signs to mind and reality and the relation of reality and mind to signs.’ — Jeffrey Strayer, Purdue University Fort Wayne, USA