Peter Pan's shadow and the relational matrix of the “I”
-
Yair Neuman
Abstract
The linguistic sign “I” is commonly used in everyday conversation and analytical sessions. However, the ubiquity of the first-person singular pronoun does not mask the mysterious fact that, unlike other signs, “I” does not have a concrete signified. This missing signified is the focus of my study. In this article, I propose one way in which the meaning of the “I” is created and discovered through collateral experience with significant others. Moreover, by drawing on the work of C.S. Peirce, I present an analytical-linguistic technique for uncovering the relational matrix in which the “I” is embedded, and some of the transformations used to frame it. This technique is illustrated through an analysis of passages from Tennessee Williams's The Glass Menagerie.
© 2009 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, D-10785 Berlin
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Semiosis, mythic algebra, and the laws of association
- Peter Pan's shadow and the relational matrix of the “I”
- An “iconological turn” in literary and cultural studies and the reconstruction of visual culture
- Reading signs: Semiotics and depth psychology
- The images of film and the categories of signs: Peirce and Deleuze on media
- The sign universe, Summum Bonum, self-control, and the normative sciences in a Peircean perspective or man ought to contribute to the growth in the concrete reasonableness
- Into the realm of zeroness: Peirce's categories and Vipassana meditation
- Fuzzy meanings: Exploring meta-theories of communication in advertising research
- Visual syntax in the iconography of Saint Nicholas
- Advertising to Canada's official language groups: A comparative critical discourse analysis
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Semiosis, mythic algebra, and the laws of association
- Peter Pan's shadow and the relational matrix of the “I”
- An “iconological turn” in literary and cultural studies and the reconstruction of visual culture
- Reading signs: Semiotics and depth psychology
- The images of film and the categories of signs: Peirce and Deleuze on media
- The sign universe, Summum Bonum, self-control, and the normative sciences in a Peircean perspective or man ought to contribute to the growth in the concrete reasonableness
- Into the realm of zeroness: Peirce's categories and Vipassana meditation
- Fuzzy meanings: Exploring meta-theories of communication in advertising research
- Visual syntax in the iconography of Saint Nicholas
- Advertising to Canada's official language groups: A comparative critical discourse analysis