Semiotic Rotations
Title | Semiotic Rotations PDF eBook |
Author | SunHee Kim Gertz |
Publisher | IAP |
Pages | 230 |
Release | 2007-03-01 |
Genre | Psychology |
ISBN | 1607527146 |
The title of our volume on interdisciplinary semiotics is situated in a geographical metaphor and points to the possibility of uncovering meanings through shifting perspectives as well as to the possibility of understanding how these various modes of meaning are articulated and framed in particular cultural instances. Regardless of medium, semiotic rotations permit play between the surface and underlying levels of a communication, reveal the relationship between open and closed systems of signification, and modulate shades of meaning caught between the visible and invisible. Readerly play in these sets of apparent oppositions reveals that the less each pairing is held to be a coupling of oppositions and the more they are observed through perspectives gained by semiotic rotations, then the more complex and rich the modes of meaning may become.
Semiotic Rotations
Title | Semiotic Rotations PDF eBook |
Author | Sunhee Kim Gertz |
Publisher | Information Age Publishing |
Pages | 236 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN |
The title of our volume on interdisciplinary semiotics is situated in a geographical metaphor and points to the possibility of uncovering meanings through shifting perspectives as well as to the possibility of understanding how these various modes of meaning are articulated and framed in particular cultural instances. Regardless of medium, semiotic rotations permit play between the surface and underlying levels of a communication, reveal the relationship between open and closed systems of signification, and modulate shades of meaning caught between the visible and invisible. Readerly play in these sets of apparent oppositions reveals that the less each pairing is held to be a coupling of oppositions and the more they are observed through perspectives gained by semiotic rotations, then the more complex and rich the modes of meaning may become.
Chicago’s Redevelopment Machine and Blues Clubs
Title | Chicago’s Redevelopment Machine and Blues Clubs PDF eBook |
Author | David Wilson |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 215 |
Release | 2018-02-01 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 331970818X |
This book examines the conflict surrounding the latest redevelopment frontier in Chicago: the city’s South Side blues clubs and blocks. Like Chicago, cities such as Cleveland, St. Louis, Boston, Washington D.C., Indianapolis, Milwaukee, and Philadelphia are experiencing a new redevelopment machine: one of tyrannizing and fear. Its actors are adroit at working via the creation of fear to “terror-redevelop” in these historically neglected neighborhoods. The book also discusses the powerful race and class-based politics in Chicago’s blues clubs that resist such change. A “leisure as resistance” framework represents the latest innovative form of opposition to the transformation of these historic sites.
Social Representations in the Social Arena
Title | Social Representations in the Social Arena PDF eBook |
Author | Annamaria Silvana De Rosa |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 418 |
Release | 2012 |
Genre | Psychology |
ISBN | 0415591198 |
This comprehensive text presents key theoretical issues and extensive empirical research using different theoretical and methodological approaches to consider the value of social representation theory when social representations are examined not only in isolation, but also in context.
The Cambridge Handbook of Cultural-Historical Psychology
Title | The Cambridge Handbook of Cultural-Historical Psychology PDF eBook |
Author | Anton Yasnitsky |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 1060 |
Release | 2014-09-30 |
Genre | Psychology |
ISBN | 1316060454 |
The field of cultural-historical psychology originated in the work of Lev Vygotsky and the Vygotsky Circle in the Soviet Union more than eighty years ago, and has now established a powerful research tradition in Russia and the West. The Cambridge Handbook of Cultural-Historical Psychology is the first volume to systematically present cultural-historical psychology as an integrative/holistic developmental science of mind, brain, and culture. Its main focus is the inseparable unity of the historically evolving human mind, brain, and culture, and the ways to understand it. The contributors are major international experts in the field, and include authors of major works on Lev Vygotsky, direct collaborators and associates of Alexander Luria, and renowned neurologist Oliver Sacks. The Handbook will be of interest to students and scholars in the fields of psychology, education, humanities and neuroscience.
Dialogic Formations
Title | Dialogic Formations PDF eBook |
Author | Marie-Cécile Bertau |
Publisher | IAP |
Pages | 359 |
Release | 2013-01-01 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1623960398 |
This volume understands itself as an invitation to follow a fundamental shift in perspective, away from the self-contained ‘I’ of Western conventions, and towards a relational self, where development and change are contingent on otherness. In the framework of ‘Dialogical Self Theory’ (Hermans & Hermans-Konopka, 2010; Hermans & Gieser, 2012), it is precisely the forms of interaction and exchange with others and with the world that determine the course of the self’s development. The volume hence addresses dialogical processes in human interaction from a psychological perspective, bringing together previously separate theoretical traditions about the ‘self’ and about ‘dialogue’ within the innovative framework of Dialogical Self Theory. The book is devoted to developmental questions, and so broaches one of the more difficult and challenging topics for models of a pluralist self: the question of how the dynamics of multiplicity emerge and change over time. This question is explored by addressing ontogenetic questions, directed at the emergence of the dialogical self in early infancy, as well as microgenetic questions, addressed to later developmental dynamics in adulthood. Additionally, development and change in a range of culture-specific settings and practices is also examined, including the practices of mothering, of migration and cross-cultural assimilation, and of ‘doing psychotherapy’.
Lives And Relationships
Title | Lives And Relationships PDF eBook |
Author | Yasuhiro Omi |
Publisher | IAP |
Pages | 411 |
Release | 2013-12-01 |
Genre | Psychology |
ISBN | 1623964296 |
This book brings to cultural psychology the focus on phenomenology of everyday life. Whether it is in the context of education, work, or exploration of life environments, the chapters in this book converge on the need to give attention to complex realities of everyday living. Thus, a description of pre-school organization in Japan would be in its form very different from school organization in Britain or Colombia—yet the realities of human beings acting in social roles are continuous around the world.