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Digital Media Foundations
                            Arfa Shah
                            K1109528




SEMIOTICS
What is “Semiotics”?
 Semiotics is the study of signs and symbols. It
looks how signs and symbols are used to
communicate and develop interpretations.
Ferdinand de Saussure 
•   Saussure was a swiss linguist who created the term
    “semiotics”. Saussure distinguished between the signifier and
    signified. The “signifier” is the physical form which the sign
    takes, the “signified” is what we understand the form to
    represent. Therefore, for a sign to be considered a sign, it
    must both be the signifier and the signified. He was as also
    concerned with the arbitrariness of language and language
    itself as signs.
•   Saussure argued that words are verbal signifiers that are
    personal to whoever is interpreting them so for example,
    there is nothing physical about the rose that determines it
    must be called a “Rose”- this is why different languages have
    different spellings for words such as “tree” and “rose”.
    Furthermore, when you see the written word “rose”, this acts
    as an arbitrary signifier leading the individual to think of any
    rose they wish whether it be red, pink or yellow.

•   However, a signifier can have many different representations
    which can turn it into a different sign. For example, the word
    ‘open’ becomes a completely different signified when it
    states “push to open the door”. Another example is where it
    states on the top of a juice bottle to “open this end”- this
    highlights that the same form (signifier) can have different
    meanings (signified).
Roland Barthes
• Barthes was a French literary
  theorist, critic and like Saussure,
  was also interested in semiotics.
  Barthes semiotic theory focuses
  on how signs and photographs
  represent different cultures and
  ideologies in different ways. These
  messages are established in two
  ways, through:
  Denotation: The literal meaning of
  the sign
                    &
  Connotation: The suggested
  meaning of the sign, the cultural
  conventions associated with the
  sign.
• For example, Harry Potter denotes a
  storybook character, it connotes to
  wizards, witches, spells, Hogwarts,
  magic and spells. A rose denotes a
  flower, however it’s connotations
  could be passion, love, romance.
• The term “myth” refers to the
  collective, unconscious meaning
  created as the result of a semiotic
  process.
• Barthes theorised that a myth is a
  chain of semiotic events which, when
  experienced or seen by members of
  society, creates a subconscious
  meaning. For example, when
  members of society come across the
  signs of McDonalds, Burger Kind, KFC,
  Pizza Hut, the literal meaning is that
  they are restaurants whereas the myth
  would be consumerism, capitalism,
  obesity which society members will
  not register on a conscious level.
Stuart Hall
• Stuart Hall is a cultural theorist and
  sociologist.
• Hall’s encoding/decoding model is a
  part of the reception theory that looks
  at how audience interpret and
  respond to a particular medium
  whether it be a newspaper or
  television show.
• Hall theorised that broadcasters,
  producers, institutions such as
  newspapers and magazine encode a
  particular media message which
  creates a new form of
  communication. Hall argued that the
  audience then decode (receive) this
  meaning using their own methods of
  logical interpretation.
• Hall argued that the meaning of
  media messages is not fixed by the
  institution that is encoding the
  message and that those receiving the
  message are not passive when it
  comes to interpreting meaning.
• Hall also argued that the meaning of the text is
  relative to the person//audience interpreting it.
  The producer (encoder) can fix the meaning of
  the message in a specific way but they cannot
  control how the audience decode the message
  and this is dependent on their personal
  background, economic situation and cultural
  background.
• For Hall, the denotation and connotation
  process is an analytical tool He also argues that
  it is very rare for signs to signify their literal
  meaning in the world and that most signs will
  combine both the denotative and connotative
  process and work simultaneously together to
  create meaning.
• Hall went onto argue that for those decoding
  readings, there can be a number of unlimited
  readings and that the decoding process is
  “polysemic”- meaning that one text can have
  a number of meanings. Hall stated that whilst
  these various meanings do exist, they will
  eventually give way to a “dominant or
  preferred meaning”.

• The next slide gives an example of Hall’s
  communication model.
The magazine editor is encoding
the message of the latest
fashion on the catwalk on this
cover of “Elle” magazine. The
reader may decode the
message as either a) the latest
fashion on the catwalk
b) this is what “beauty” is and
that this is what all women
should look like or
c) in order to make it into the
modelling industry, you have to
starve yourself to the point
where there is nothing left of
you.

The way you interpret
(decode) this magazine
cover will depend on your
social, economic and
cultural background
amongst other interests.

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Semiotics

  • 1. Digital Media Foundations Arfa Shah K1109528 SEMIOTICS
  • 2. What is “Semiotics”? Semiotics is the study of signs and symbols. It looks how signs and symbols are used to communicate and develop interpretations.
  • 3. Ferdinand de Saussure  • Saussure was a swiss linguist who created the term “semiotics”. Saussure distinguished between the signifier and signified. The “signifier” is the physical form which the sign takes, the “signified” is what we understand the form to represent. Therefore, for a sign to be considered a sign, it must both be the signifier and the signified. He was as also concerned with the arbitrariness of language and language itself as signs. • Saussure argued that words are verbal signifiers that are personal to whoever is interpreting them so for example, there is nothing physical about the rose that determines it must be called a “Rose”- this is why different languages have different spellings for words such as “tree” and “rose”. Furthermore, when you see the written word “rose”, this acts as an arbitrary signifier leading the individual to think of any rose they wish whether it be red, pink or yellow. • However, a signifier can have many different representations which can turn it into a different sign. For example, the word ‘open’ becomes a completely different signified when it states “push to open the door”. Another example is where it states on the top of a juice bottle to “open this end”- this highlights that the same form (signifier) can have different meanings (signified).
  • 4. Roland Barthes • Barthes was a French literary theorist, critic and like Saussure, was also interested in semiotics. Barthes semiotic theory focuses on how signs and photographs represent different cultures and ideologies in different ways. These messages are established in two ways, through: Denotation: The literal meaning of the sign & Connotation: The suggested meaning of the sign, the cultural conventions associated with the sign.
  • 5. • For example, Harry Potter denotes a storybook character, it connotes to wizards, witches, spells, Hogwarts, magic and spells. A rose denotes a flower, however it’s connotations could be passion, love, romance. • The term “myth” refers to the collective, unconscious meaning created as the result of a semiotic process. • Barthes theorised that a myth is a chain of semiotic events which, when experienced or seen by members of society, creates a subconscious meaning. For example, when members of society come across the signs of McDonalds, Burger Kind, KFC, Pizza Hut, the literal meaning is that they are restaurants whereas the myth would be consumerism, capitalism, obesity which society members will not register on a conscious level.
  • 6. Stuart Hall • Stuart Hall is a cultural theorist and sociologist. • Hall’s encoding/decoding model is a part of the reception theory that looks at how audience interpret and respond to a particular medium whether it be a newspaper or television show. • Hall theorised that broadcasters, producers, institutions such as newspapers and magazine encode a particular media message which creates a new form of communication. Hall argued that the audience then decode (receive) this meaning using their own methods of logical interpretation. • Hall argued that the meaning of media messages is not fixed by the institution that is encoding the message and that those receiving the message are not passive when it comes to interpreting meaning.
  • 7. • Hall also argued that the meaning of the text is relative to the person//audience interpreting it. The producer (encoder) can fix the meaning of the message in a specific way but they cannot control how the audience decode the message and this is dependent on their personal background, economic situation and cultural background. • For Hall, the denotation and connotation process is an analytical tool He also argues that it is very rare for signs to signify their literal meaning in the world and that most signs will combine both the denotative and connotative process and work simultaneously together to create meaning.
  • 8. • Hall went onto argue that for those decoding readings, there can be a number of unlimited readings and that the decoding process is “polysemic”- meaning that one text can have a number of meanings. Hall stated that whilst these various meanings do exist, they will eventually give way to a “dominant or preferred meaning”. • The next slide gives an example of Hall’s communication model.
  • 9. The magazine editor is encoding the message of the latest fashion on the catwalk on this cover of “Elle” magazine. The reader may decode the message as either a) the latest fashion on the catwalk b) this is what “beauty” is and that this is what all women should look like or c) in order to make it into the modelling industry, you have to starve yourself to the point where there is nothing left of you. The way you interpret (decode) this magazine cover will depend on your social, economic and cultural background amongst other interests.