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Semiotics at the Circus [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 205 pages, kõrgus x laius: 230x155 mm, kaal: 435 g, 6 Illustrations
  • Sari: Semiotics, Communication and Cognition [SCC]
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Jun-2010
  • Kirjastus: De Gruyter Mouton
  • ISBN-10: 3110218291
  • ISBN-13: 9783110218299
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 205 pages, kõrgus x laius: 230x155 mm, kaal: 435 g, 6 Illustrations
  • Sari: Semiotics, Communication and Cognition [SCC]
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Jun-2010
  • Kirjastus: De Gruyter Mouton
  • ISBN-10: 3110218291
  • ISBN-13: 9783110218299
Teised raamatud teemal:
Semiotics is long on theoretical, often obscure discourses, but short on applications that demonstrate with clarity the applicability of its methods. This book confronts a challenging object, the circus, and endeavors to describe its performances in ways that explain how circus acts produce meaning and cause a deep emotional involvement for their audiences. The approach is not top-down, such as would be a method that would dogmatically apply a particular theory to fully explain the phenomena in terms of this theory alone. Epistemologically, this book is an example of the bottom-up strategy, which consists of considering first the objects and heuristically calling upon methodological resources in a broad theoretical array to come to grips with the problems that are encountered. Any circus act is a complex event that has cognitive and emotional dimensions. It is also a part of a history and an institution, and cannot be abstracted from its cultural and sociological contexts. Thus the range of relevant theoretical and methodological approaches must include structural semiotics, biosemiotics, pragmatics, socio-semiotics, cultural anthropology, the cognitive sciences, the psychology and sociology of emotions, to name only the most important. But the ultimate focus of this book is to enable the readers to better understand the meaning of circus performances and to appreciate the skills and creativity of this traditional popular art, which constantly renews itself from generation to generation.

Paul Bouissac, University of Toronto, Canada.
Introduction A semiotician at the circus 1(10)
Chapter 1 The production of circus space
11(10)
1.1 The constraints of nomadic life
11(3)
1.2 The spatial algorithm of the circus
14(2)
1.3 Squaring the circle
16(2)
1.4 Olli and Illi: playing with space and desire
18(3)
Chapter 2 The time of the circus. Cognitive and emotional dimensions of acrobatics and other circus acts
21(23)
2.1 Circus acts as texts
22(2)
2.2 A brain to brain affair
24(5)
2.3 Another kind of time
29(5)
2.4 The timeless tools of time
34(4)
2.5 Clowns at work: the melodic structure of social interactions
38(5)
2.6 Concluding remarks: circus time and cognition
43(1)
Chapter 3 In what sense is a circus animal performing?
44(11)
3.1 Meaning, text, and context
44(2)
3.2 The civilized animal
46(4)
3.3 A symphony of signs: the art of deceit and the pitfalls of self-deception
50(5)
Chapter 4 Horses' feathers: from tacit knowledge to circus metaphors
55(13)
4.1 A theoretical prelude
55(3)
4.2 Birds, horses, and feathers
58(2)
4.3 Horses, ostriches, and chorus girls
60(5)
4.4 Circus horses in times of cultural changes
65(3)
Chapter 5 Circus and cycles
68(14)
5.1 Horse and bicycle: preliminary analogies
68(3)
5.2 History, cultural evolution, and the circus
71(1)
5.3 The introduction of the bicycle in circus spectacles
72(3)
5.4 Pondering the strange history of the bicycle
75(3)
5.5 The semiotics of the bicycle
78(2)
5.6 The bicycle enters the kingdom of the horse
80(2)
Chapter 6 The pyramid and the wheel: the visual discourse of circus acrobatics
82(21)
6.1 The representation of law and anarchy
83(1)
6.2 The language of the pyramid
84(2)
6.3 The Tangier troupe: from order to chaos and back
86(3)
6.4 The staging of acrobatics as social metaphors
89(1)
6.5 Revolution(s) on a trampoline
90(2)
6.6 Triumph and tragedy: the semiotics of fear and danger
92(2)
6.7 Under the semiotic magnifying lens
94(1)
6.8 Gender economy and tacit rules: norms and transgressions in the air
95(5)
6.9 The predictive power of semiotics
100(1)
6.10 Order and chaos on wheels
101(2)
Chapter 7 The logic of clown faces
103(17)
7.1 The structure of European clowns' make-up
104(2)
7.2 From structuralism to biosemiotics
106(2)
7.3 Icons of biomorphology
108(2)
7.4 White faces and white patches: the management of leucosignals in clown make-up
110(3)
7.5 A cross-cultural probe of clown make-up and its transformations
113(4)
7.6 Expanding the scope: toward a global semiotic theory of clown make-up
117(3)
Chapter 8 Incident, accident, failure: life and death at the circus
120(29)
8.1 The representation of negative experience in performance
121(1)
8.2 A science of the individual
122(3)
8.3 Toward a model of negative experience
125(2)
8.4 When failure means success: the staging of a negative experience
127(5)
8.5 The semiotic dissection of George Carl's comic act
132(2)
8.6 Anatomy of a negative masterpiece
134(2)
8.7 Subjective vs. objective situations
136(5)
8.8 A lady in danger
141(8)
Chapter 9 There's no business like show business: the marketing of performance
149(13)
9.1 Marketing the performing arts
149(5)
9.2 The golden rules of performance
154(1)
9.3 How to capture an audience
155(3)
9.4 The power of stories
158(4)
Chapter 10 The researcher as spectator: the pragmatics of circus performances
162(15)
10.1 Toward a theory of live performances
163(3)
10.2 The predicaments of description
166(4)
10.3 The rules of performance
170(2)
10.4 How to make a verbal copy
172(3)
10.5 From rules of performance to rules of description
175(2)
Conclusion Circus in perspective 177(8)
References 185(10)
Subject index 195(2)
Author index 197
Paul Bouissac, University of Toronto, Canada.