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E-raamat: Cinema and Semiotic: Peirce and Film Aesthetics, Narration, and Representation

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'Meaning' in cinema is very complex, and the flood of theories that define it have, in certain ways, left cinematic meaning meaningless. Johannes Ehrat's analysis of meaning in cinema has convinced him that what is needed is greater philosophical reflection on the construction of meaning. In Cinema and Semiotic, he attempts to resurrect meaning by employing Charles S. Peirce's theories on semiotics to debate the major contemporary film theories that have diluted it.

Based on Peirce's Semiotic and Pragmatism, Ehrat offers a novel approach to cinematic meaning in three central areas: narrative enunciation, cinematic world appropriation, and cinematic perception. Attempting a comprehensive theory of cinema instead of the regional 'middle-ground' theories that function only on certain 'common-sense' assumptions that borrow uncritically from psychophysiology Ehrat further demonstrates how a semiotic approach grasps the nature of time, not in a psychological manner, but rather cognitively, and provides a new understanding of the particular filmic sign process that relates a sign to the existence or non-existence of objects. Never before has Peirce been so fruitfully employed for the comprehension of meaning in cinema.

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'It would be difficult to find a scholar in communication, film, and cultural theory as conversant regarding Peircian semiotics as Johannes Ehrat. This richly argued book is truly compelling, and a valuable contribution to the field.' -- Floyd Merrell, Department of Foreign Languages and Literature, Purdue University
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 3(5)
On Signs, Categories, and Reality and How They Relate to Cinema
8(104)
The Use of Signs
14(10)
The Construction of Meaning
24(7)
Investigating Conduct as a Form
31(19)
The Categories of Behaviour
50(4)
The Categorial Form of Behaviour
54(15)
Logic of Relations
69(27)
The Metaphysics of Pragmaticistic Semiotic
96(16)
Semiotic and Its Practical Use for Cinema
112(53)
Cinema `Is' a Class of Sign
116(19)
The Iconism of Cinema: A first Semiotic Approach
135(13)
(From Film Pragmatics to) The Pragmaticism of Cinema
148(17)
What `Is' Cinema?
165(118)
Cinema `Is' Syntagma
171(9)
Cinema `Is' Sign Function
180(11)
Cinema `Is' Percept
191(23)
Cinema `Is' Moving Matter or Time
214(29)
What Cinema Becomes: Theory Objects Compared, Reconciled, Rejected
243(40)
Intermezzo: Cinematic Imagination of Godard's Je vous salue, Marie
248(35)
Narration in Film and Film Theory
283(62)
The Narratological Question, Peirce, and Cinema
284(3)
The Semiotic of Narrative Time
287(27)
Cinematic Time
314(31)
Intermezzo: Two Kinds of Narrative Time in Dreyer's Ordet
320(25)
Narration, Time, and Narratologies
345(53)
Ricoeur's Mimesis
346(4)
Heidegger's Ekstasis
350(10)
Aristotle's Poesis
360(11)
Greimas's Semiosis
371(8)
Bordwell's Formalism
379(8)
Olmi's Genesi
387(11)
Enunciation in Cinema
398(157)
Enunciation: From Vagueness to Generality
401(8)
Narrative Enunciation
409(26)
Rhetorical Enunciation in Cinema: Meaning in Figures
435(22)
Aesthetic Enunciation in Film
457(98)
Epilogue: Two Aesthetic Processes in Cinema
528(27)
Conclusion 555(6)
Notes 561(88)
Bibliography 649(14)
Filmography, by Director 663(4)
Index 667


Johannes Ehrat is a professor extraordinarius in the Faculty of Social Sciences at the Pontificia Università Gregoriana.