Art History Structuralism And Semiotics In Advertising Term Paper

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Art History Structuralism and Semiotics in Advertising

Modern culture in the 20th century characteristically subsists to techniques of structuralism and semiotics, which introduces a new scientific rigor to art criticism. This is because both fields of study provide systematic and detailed analyses of images and texts. Structuralism and semiotics also borrows from various disciplines, such as linguistics, anthropology, psychology, philosophy, and other social sciences in the analysis of these images and texts.

Structuralism is the study of various code functions within a single structure, which may be in different forms. Through this discipline of image and text analysis, structuralists can scientifically, i.e., objectively create concepts or ideas embedded within the unit of analysis. Semiotics, on the other hand, is the study of symbols, representation, and signs. Thus, both are essential in the study of codes (which can be words, images, sounds, odors, and objects that are encountered...

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His contribution in semiotics concerns the process of signification, defined as the "relationship of a sign or sign system to its referential reality." In his essays, Rhetoric of the Image and Myth Today, Barthes categorizes an images and texts that are analyzed into three messages, which are the signified, signifier, and sign.). Barthes did not only provide extensive study on the process of signification in semiotics; he also identified and defined the 'sign' as the "associative total of the first two terms," which means that the sign is equivalent to the addition or combination of the signifier and the signified. Thus, the signifier and the signified are parts of one whole, which…

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Works Cited

Barthes, R. (1999). Rhetoric of the image. In J.Evans & S. Hall (Eds.),

Visual Culture: The Reader (pp. 33-58). London: Sage Publications Ltd.


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