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hi folks and welcome to this
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introduction to semiotics there's a lot
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of different ways to study semiotics but
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this video will be part of a series of
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videos on the use of semiotics to study
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images and culture if you're interested
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in the influence of semiotics on film
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Theory I already have a video on
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Christian metz's semiotic film Theory so
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first what is semiotics forly it's the
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study of signs and symbols and their use
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or interpretation put differently though
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we could say that it's the study of how
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words and images come to have meanings
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and put in another way it's really the
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study of how things we see and hear
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stand in for ideas so if semiotics is
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the study of signs signs are just things
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that we see or hear that stand in for
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ideas that are not present to us this is
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not just confined to things that we call
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signs like street signs but also words
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images colors and particular choices
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that one might make when they're
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creating images the origin of semiotics
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is usually attributed to these two
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thinkers Ferdinand desur on on the left
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and CS purse on the right purse is an
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American philosopher so Sur is a French
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linguist and if you've heard the term
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semiology as opposed to semiotics
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semiology is in fact the word that sour
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himself used to describe the kind of
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linguistics that he was doing while
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purse coin the term semiotics for the
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purposes of this video though I'm just
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going to say semiotics and primarily I'm
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going to be looking at the thought of
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Ferdinand doour if you're interested in
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some of the applications of Cs purse to
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various arguments and film
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I have some videos on that subject as
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well so semiotics really comes from this
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book course in general Linguistics
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published in 1916 it's the founding text
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of semiotics and structuralist thought
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we'll get to structuralism in a minute
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the main goal of this video is to try to
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understand how we got from the
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foundations of semiotics in Ferdinando
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sour study of language to the more
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recognizable study of signs for
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understanding our culture especially
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mass culture that will get in figure
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like Roland Bart simply put how does a
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particular way of understanding language
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that we get from a thinker on the left
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get us to a series of methods for
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understanding how signs in mass culture
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convey meaning especially ideologically
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pernicious meanings and a thinker like
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Roland Bart that will be the thing that
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we're going to try to figure out today
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so what were some of the cornerstones of
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Sour's approach to language and why is
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his approach to language understood as a
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semiotic approach to language well he
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begins by defining words as signs
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and he says that signs are broken up
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into two components the signified and
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the signifier the signifier is the word
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that you hear like tree or the word that
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you see the word tree written out and
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the concept is the idea of a tree that
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comes to your mind when you read that
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word or hear that word spoken aloud so
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signifier is the word tree as it comes
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out of my mouth and signified is the
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idea of tree that pops into your mind
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whenever you hear that word or whenever
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you are about to say that word in a
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sentence that you're uttering to a
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friend the thing that made soour famous
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was his claim that the relationship
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between the signifier and the signified
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is arbitrary that it's merely based on
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convention so what does that mean he's
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basically saying that with all the words
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in the language that you speak there is
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no natural or logical relationship
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between the particular sound that comes
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out of your mouth when you say the word
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and the idea that it conjures to your
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mind when you hear that word and I think
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this becomes more obvious when you study
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other languages so in English the word
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is tree in Spanish the word is arul in
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French the word is arra but each of
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these utterances as I say them out loud
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and also the squiggles that I write down
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when I'm writing in these languages
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those sounds and those squiggles do not
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in any way resemble a tree there is no
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natural treeness that you can find in
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those sounds or in those squiggles and
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if you studied language before if you
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studied poetry you might realize that we
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do have a particular family of words
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that do in fact resemble the things that
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they signify they're called onas so the
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sound that a dog makes like woof is an
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anopia word for the sound of barking and
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you might say that against soour that
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these words unlike the word tree do in
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fact have a natural correspondence with
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the thing that they represent because
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they are designed to sound like the
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thing that the dog does but again if you
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studied other languages you will realize
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that there's always a degree of
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arbitrariness or mere conventionality to
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the nonsense word that we use to stand
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in for particular sounds so in English
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we have words like woof or ARF or bowwow
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in French you have guow guow and in
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French you have HW every language has
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slightly different sounds none of them
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perfectly maps onto the sound that the
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dog makes there's still a degree of
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arbitrariness of mere convention in
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correctly uttering the phrase woof or
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Gua guow when you're speaking to say an
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English speaker or a Spanish speaker so
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whereas on one view an automonopia word
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might seem to go against Sour's Claim
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about arbitrariness and Convention in
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another sense it actually proves his
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point because even those special words
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that are designed to resemble the thing
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that they signify still have a degree of
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arbitrariness to them so that's the
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first claim that sosur makes about
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language that the words that we use do
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not have a natural or logical
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relationship to the things that they
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signify the second major claim that he
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makes about language is that words
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derive their meaning only from their
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difference from other words in the
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language so what do I mean by that this
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is a little bit harder to understand
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well let's take a look at that word tree
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again so Sur is saying that in order to
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understand the sign tree that is to
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understand the utterance tree in the
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first place and to understand the idea
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of the tree in the second place
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signifier and signified you only really
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come to that understanding through its
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difference from other signs so you know
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that tree is tree because it's not spree
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and it's not Brie and you know that tree
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is tree because it's not true and it's
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not try and this might be a little bit
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confusing but have you ever tried to
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learn a language and someone and someone
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is repeating a new word to you and you
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say it back to them and they're saying
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no you've got it wrong and they say it's
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not this it's that and when they repeat
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these two words to you to your ears they
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sound identical but to them clearly they
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have two different significations
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they're two distinct utterances it is
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your inability to hear that difference
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to hear the distinction that makes it
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impossible for you to understand the
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signifier so this is what it means on
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the level of the signifier for soour to
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say that quote concepts are purely
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differential and defined not by their
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positive content but negatively by their
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relations with other terms in the system
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the first thing you need to do is to
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hear the fundamental differences and how
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the sound is made and then you'll
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understand that it is a distinct word so
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that's step one but step two is that you
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also have to understand the idea the
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signified Tree by virtue of coming to
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understand all the things that are not
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tree so you only understand really
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understand the idea of tree Once you
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understand the idea of bush and once you
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come to understand the idea of grass
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you're opposing tree to all these other
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leafy green things that you see out into
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the world now again this might be
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confusing but I want to make it clearer
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with an example the way that children
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start to learn Concepts and words I
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think is a really useful example of this
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idea so I think it's a reasonable
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example to imagine that for some
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children their first encounter with a
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four-legged furry animal is their family
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dog so let's say you have a child and
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they learn the word dog and they know
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that their dog Rover is dog they apply
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that word concept to that thing in their
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house but let's say that the kid goes to
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the zoo for the first time and the first
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exhibit that they see is the lion
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exhibit and they point to that lion and
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they say dog and the father says no no
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no that's not a dog that's a lion it is
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only by saying no to the child by
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showing that child the fundamental
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difference between dog and lion that the
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child truly understands what a dog is in
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the first place the child probably just
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used the word dog to correspond to any
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furry four-legged thing didn't really
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know dog but once the child starts to
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learn all these other furry four-legged
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things it will truly know dog as a
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concept based on its difference from
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similar things that it is not this is
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what it means to say that concepts are
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purely differential and defined not by
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their positive content but negatively by
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their relations with other terms in the
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system and it is really this idea that
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the words that we use come to mean what
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they mean through the relationships with
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other words in a self-contained system
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that idea is the essence of
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structuralism so I said earlier that
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Sour's Linguistics was not just the
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beginnings of semiotics it was also the
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founding text of structuralism
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structural Linguistics denotes schools
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or theories in which language is
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conceived pered as a self-contained
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self-regulating semiotic system whose
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elements are defined by their
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relationship to other elements within
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the system that's the essence of his
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argument and that's the essence of
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structuralism so right now we have a
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groundbreaking theory of language whose
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two points are these that the signifier
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connection to a signified is arbitrary
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and second that words derive meaning
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from difference or their negative
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relationship to things that they are not
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so now we might say so what in other
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words how do we get from this weird
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theory of language that says that words
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are signs and a self-contained system to
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a theory of culture or a methodology for
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analyzing culture that looks at images
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and words and tries to uncover the
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meanings that we might not be aware of
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in other words how do we get from
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someone who's trying to understand the
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essence of the word tree and its
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relationship to the idea of a tree to
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say something like the function of a
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tree in a Patagonia ad which is
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consistent with the kind of thing that
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Roland Bart would do in books like
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mythologies well here's how I might put
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the payoff if you have a theory of
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language that says that one a signifier
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connection to its meaning is arbitrary
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and two words derive meaning only from
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difference then what you have is really
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an idea about language that is also an
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idea about thought and reality so I
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might put it this way we usually think
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that there's this stuff in reality say
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children trees
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basketballs all kinds of things and then
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we create words that refer directly to
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those things but so sora's view of
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language implies that it's really the
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other way around so let me try to cash
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out this intuitive idea of language and
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reality that sour is going against so in
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the first book of the Bible in Genesis
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there's a moment when Adam gets to name
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the animals here's the passage God
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brought the animals to Adam to see what
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he would name them and whatever the man
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called each living creature that was its
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name Genesis as you probably know is a
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story about the beginning of all things
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and there is a micro story within that
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story about the beginning of language
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and that story goes there's the first
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man Adam he sees a bunch of things that
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need names and he points to them and he
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says you're a lion and you're an
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elephant and you're a cow and that's how
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we got language so Sora says this is so
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wrong here's how Jonathan Belle a media
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scholar kind of explains this idea he
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says although sour never made this leap
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his semiotic method showing how we are
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surrounded by and shaped by science
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systems leads us to the realization that
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Consciousness and experience are built
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out of langu anguage and the other
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science systems circulating in society
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that have existed before we take them up
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and use them language was already there
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before we were born and all of our lives
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are lived through the signs which
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language gives us to think speak and
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write with in other words it's not as if
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we have this unmediated access to
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reality to basketballs and children and
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lions and that we create sounds that
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correspond with those things that's just
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the myth the truth of it is that we're
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born into language and language is a
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syst system where the sounds that we use
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to correspond with ideas is not natural
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but arbitrary and there's no positive
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relationship between the sounds we use
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and the ideas we want to communicate but
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it's only based on difference not a
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onetoone correspondence between things
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in reality and the words that we give
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them now this is an idea that isn't
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confined to sosur it's all over the
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place many philosophers and linguists
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and artists in their own right have
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stumbled upon this
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idea because I'm a film scholar I often
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think about experimental filmmakers San
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brage who said quote how many colors are
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there in a field of grass to The
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Crawling baby unaware of green it's the
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idea that because there's not a onetoone
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correspondence between things in the
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world and the words we use to
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communicate about those things we have
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to realize that the very specific and
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finite and constructed words that we've
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come to use might be restricting our
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ability to think and to see how many
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colors are there in a field of grass if
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you didn't have the concept green
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limiting your EXP experience so
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basically what sour is doing here is he
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is participating in a broad tendency of
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20th century thought where we think that
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reality and language are very closely
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mapped on to each other but in fact
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that's not really the case there's a
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vast distance between reality the things
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in reality and language the words we use
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to correspond with those things to take
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a silly example if I utter the phrase
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purple dog to you chances are that
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you'll be able to understand exactly
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what I mean you might even have an image
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in your mind an image that's really not
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that hard to conjure even though I'm
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sure that you've never seen an actual
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purple dog in your life this is a fairly
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trivial example of all the ways that
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language is a signifying system the
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phrase purple dog works not because it
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corresponds with purple dogs in the
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world but because the adjective purple
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and the property of purpleness can
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easily map on to the noun dog and that
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very simple connection between purple
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and dog which is a function of language
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allows you to imagine something that is
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not in
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reality once again reality and language
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are far away from each other and the
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reason this distance between reality and
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language matters for people who are
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studying culture and signs in culture is
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that if there is no natural connection
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between reality and language perhaps
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also there is no natural connection
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between the images that we consume and
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the ideas that those images bring to
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mind Ellen cider puts it this way she
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says the important Insight that can be
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gained from the study of semiotics and
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structuralism is that all communication
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is partial motivated conventional and
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biased in other words it is not natural
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it is a system and the system is
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separate from reality based on a series
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of conventions not based on a series of
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direct and logical connections to the
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real world so this idea is in essence
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what someone like Roland Bart wants to
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take from someone like Ferdinand do
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soour Roland Bart is interested in
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things like IDE ideology and how certain
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normative ideas in the world get
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injected into the images that we consume
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that's how Sour's fairly scientistic
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understanding of language is so
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appealing for someone like Roland Bart
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who's interested in culture and politics
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but there's one more set of terms that I
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want to introduce to distinguish between
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the semiotics of language and the
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semiotics of culture that's denotation
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and
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connotation so let's go back to that
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signified and signify a relationship
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once again so if I have a classic soran
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example where I have the signifier tree
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and the idea of the tree this
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relationship is an example of denotation
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denotation is simply the obvious and
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immediate meaning that a sign brings to
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mind if I see those squiggles I think of
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the concept of a tree and denotation
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isn't just for words it's also for
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images if I see this painting of a tree
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I will think of the concept of a tree I
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will recognize the painting because I
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know the concept we are at the level of
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denotation but if I ask a different
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question what does this signifier of
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this tree in this Patagonia ad signify
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Beyond its mere obvious representation
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of a tree then I'm going from denotation
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to connotation and for someone who
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studies culture this is where things get
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interesting and this study of
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connotation is largely what a semiotic
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analysis of images will consist of and
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you have to keep in mind that when
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you're studying culture say this ad for
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Patagonia you have to realize that it's
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full of signs the ad itself is a sign
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but it's made up of many other signs the
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word Patagonia is a sign that gains its
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meaning partly from its reference to the
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actual geographical region in South
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America the use of the family unit in
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this image a mother father and a child
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is also a sign it's a choice that
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conveys a certain meaning the gesture of
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hugging the tree is also a sign that
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refers to a history of hugging trees and
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what that means within a certain
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environmental movement the phrase let
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them be and also the choice to make
00:16:55
those words the largest words in the
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page and also Center those are signs and
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their meanings come from many
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associations that we might have with
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utterances of that phrase a John Lennon
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song for example and what it means might
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not be irrelevant here the tight face
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for Patagonia kids is also a sign we
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immediately understand why that typ face
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works for signifying the difference
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between Patagonia kids and the company
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Patagonia the framing Choice which cuts
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off the parents heads and privileges the
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child's perspective is also a sign and
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the color of the child's cap which are
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interestingly red white and blue might
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also be considered a sign especially
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given that Patagonia is an American
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company and those three colors are the
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colors of the American flag and finally
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of course if we want to stay consistent
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with the difference between denotation
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and connotation we might fixate on that
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giant tree trunk if earlier we looked at
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say how the squiggles T get us to think
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of a tree or the sound tree as it comes
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out of my mouth gets me to understand or
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imagine the concept of tree what might
00:17:59
we say about the connotation of this
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giant tree trunk in this ad well we
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might say a number of things but
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importantly the kinds of things that we
00:18:07
might say are going to be a lot
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different from Simply the idea of tree
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the tree here might signify the natural
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world something that should not be
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tampered with in other words let be thus
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it might bring to mind certain values
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tied to environmentalism and those
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values are enhanced by the hugging of
00:18:23
the tree and those values are mixed in
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with a certain normative view of the
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family unit a mother a father and a
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child what the semiotic thinker wants
00:18:31
you to realize about these meanings and
00:18:33
the relationship to the signs that
00:18:35
they're attached to is that there is
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nothing natural about the relationship
00:18:38
between the sign and the meaning that
00:18:40
they convey one person might say of
00:18:42
course in an ad for Patagonia kids
00:18:45
you're going to have a mother a father
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and a child because that's the natural
00:18:48
family unit but a thinker like Roland
00:18:50
Bart is going to want to poke at our
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assumption that certain things are
00:18:54
natural just like suur was trying to say
00:18:57
that there is no natural relation
00:18:58
relationship between words and what they
00:19:00
come to signify they exist within
00:19:02
systems of meaning and the systems of
00:19:04
meaning were created collectively in
00:19:06
overtime by human beings they didn't
00:19:08
come from biology and they weren't
00:19:09
ordained by God so Ellen cider puts this
00:19:12
idea this way she says one of the goals
00:19:14
of semiotic analysis is to make us
00:19:16
conscious of the use of connotation so
00:19:18
that we realize how much of what appears
00:19:20
naturally meaningful is actually
00:19:22
historical changeable and culturally
00:19:24
specific Bart argued that is Roland Bart
00:19:28
that connotation is the primary way in
00:19:30
which the mass media communicate
00:19:32
ideological meanings so that's it for
00:19:34
this introduction to semiotics with an
00:19:36
emphasis on the relationship between
00:19:38
semitics of culture and the linguistic
00:19:40
theory of fando Sor I'll see you next
00:19:42
time