The Death of Meaning
By (Author) George V. Zito
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
21st September 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Anthropology
Philosophy of language
306.4
Hardback
176
Zito argues that although meanings change with time, at the end of the 20th century we are witnessing not a change in meanings, but the demise of meaning itself. He presents evidence of the ever decreasing use of word language, upon which meaning is predicated, and the increase in iconographic impacts (Macintosh and television, for example); the routinization of ritual; the efforts to control information (as during the Gulf War); and the ideological competition among groups to dominate definitions of social situations by the use of oversimplified rhetorics. Zito pays particular attention to language, employing empirical data with classical and contemporary theoretical perspectives to argue that as the meanings of language change, the relations among persons change, and vice versa. Recommended for scholars of sociology and language.
GEORGE V. ZITO is Associate Professor of Sociology at Syracuse University./e He is the author of seven books, including Systems of Discourse (Greenwood, 1984) and The Sociology of Shakespeare (1991).