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Developing a Neo-Peircean Approach to Signs

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Developing a Neo-Peircean Approach to Signs

Contributors:

By (Author) Tony Jappy

ISBN:

9781350288850

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Bloomsbury Academic

Publication Date:

7th August 2025

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Semiotics / semiology
Communication studies
Cultural and media studies

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

216

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 234mm

Description

This book takes up a number of Charles Sanders Peirces undeveloped semiotic concepts and highlights their theoretical interest for a general semiotics.

Peirces career as a logician spanned almost half a century, during which time he produced several increasingly complex sign systems. The best-known, from 1903, defined amongst other things a signifying process involving sign, object and interpretant, the universally-known icon-index-symbol division and a set of 10 distinct classes of signs. Peirce subsequently expanded this process to include 2 objects, the sign and 3 interpretants. Uncoincidentally, in the 5 years between 1903 and the final system of 1908, he introduced a number of highly innovative semiotic concepts which he never developed.

One such concept is hypoiconicity, which comprises 3 levels of isomorphism holding between sign and object and, in spite of the mutations these varieties of icon subsequently underwent, offers qualitative analysis as a complement to the traditional literal-figurative binarism in the discussion of verbal and nonverbal signs. Another is semiosis, which Peirce introduced and defined in 1907 but only rarely illustrated. Involving a complex combination of object, perception, interpretation and a medium, this is shown to be a far more complex signifying process than the one implicit in the three-correlate definition of the sign of 1903. Exploring the evolving theoretical background to the emergence of these new concepts and showing how they differ from certain contemporary conceptions of sign, mind and signification, the book proposes an introduction to, and explanations and illustrations of, these important developments.

Reviews

A very serious and ausfhrliche research. -- Claudio Federico Guerri, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina

Author Bio

Tony Jappy is Honorary Professor of English Linguistics and Semiotics at the University of Perpignan Via Domitia, France.

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