Winston, Brian and Tsang, Hing (2009) The subject and the indexicality of the photograph. Semiotica, 173 (1-4). pp. 453-469. ISSN 0037-1998
Full content URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/SEMI.2009.021
Documents |
|
![]() |
PDF
Semiotica_proof.pdf - Whole Document Restricted to Repository staff only 123kB |
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Item Status: | Live Archive |
Abstract
Taking as a case study the documentary Unknown White Male (UK, 2005) — a film whose theme and reception problematizes stable notions of what constitutes subjectivity — a corrective is offered to the dominant mode applying Peircean semiotics to the moving image. Cinema and media studies have tended to apply Peirce's triadic division of the sign in a limited, formalist way following the explications of his method offered by Wollen and others. However Wollen ignores Peirce's placement of photograph as indexical within the context of the iconic as well as the distinction Peirce draws between ‘instantaneous’ and ‘composite’ photographs. Moreover, Peirce's more general understanding of the importance of semiotic analysis to the overall mental well-being of the human subject, hitherto largely ignored by media scholars, is also addressed.
Keywords: | semotics, documentary film, Wollen, indexicality, iconicity, Semiology, broadcasting, communication, digital platforms, documentary, free expression, free speech, human rights, journalism, media ethics, media history, media technology, press |
---|---|
Subjects: | P Mass Communications and Documentation > P300 Media studies P Mass Communications and Documentation > P303 Film studies |
Divisions: | College of Arts > Lincoln School of Film & Media > Lincoln School of Film & Media (Media) |
ID Code: | 2143 |
Deposited On: | 25 Jan 2010 16:28 |
Repository Staff Only: item control page