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Political Analysis as Auto-Communication of Culture

  • Andreas Ventsel
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 29. April 2014
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Abstract

The present paper sets for itself the modest task of pointing to a problem of metalanguage and object-language in political analysis, from a cultural semiotics point of view. The so-called post-foundationalist view, common in political discourse theories, is primarily characterized by the rejection of essentialist notions of ground for the social, and the inauguration of cultural and discursive characteristics into the wider social scientific paradigm. However, it seems that despite placing communication at the heart of their conceptions of discourse, the communicative character of constructing power relations remains undertheorized in those conceptions. This paper attempts to approach the above problem by way of the concepts of communication and autocommunication (Lotman). The outcomes stemming from the latter are unavoidable, since the result of any possible research (text) itself belongs to culture or a larger discourse and operates as the organizing function of the latter. Hence, research practice and its results always need to be looked at as mutually affecting each other.

Published Online: 2014-4-29
Published in Print: 2012-9-1

© 2014 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

Artikel in diesem Heft

  1. Front matter
  2. Part One. Semiotic Conference Information
  3. List of the Plenary Speakers at The 11th World Congress of Semiotics (Oct. 5-9, 2012)
  4. A Sketch of Professor Ersu Ding ( 丁尔苏)
  5. Part Two. New Theories and Applications of Semiotics
  6. Iconicity, Otherness and Translation
  7. The Development of Semiotics and Linguistics from the Perspective of the Evolution of the Logical Systems of Categories
  8. Compound Signs
  9. A Glance at the Relation between Saussure and Aesthetics
  10. Semiotics, under the Challenge of Globalization
  11. Towards a Semiotics of Brand Equity: On the Interdependency of Meaning Surplus and Surplus Value in a Political Economy of Brands
  12. On the Change of the Middle Item and Cultural Markedness
  13. A Different Imagination: Authenticity and Inauthenticity of Narrating Kashmir
  14. Textual Identity Bothering the Semiotic Self: Nina’s Alternating Identities in Black Swan
  15. Subject, Dialogue and Transcendence in Sophocles’s Oedipus at Colonus
  16. Part Three. Special Section for Peircean Semiotics and the Philosophy of Inquiry
  17. Introduction to the Special Section for Peircean Semiotics and His Philosophy of Inquiry
  18. Peircean Habits and the Life of Symbols
  19. Information, Abstraction and the External Structure of the Sign: Their Relation to the Social Sciences
  20. Peircean Triadicity: Application to Deictic Use
  21. Part Four Special Section for Tartu Semiotics
  22. What Is Special about Our Activities in Tartu?
  23. The Semiotics of the Noosphere and Signs that Matter
  24. Political Analysis as Auto-Communication of Culture
  25. Boris Uspenskij and the Tartu–Moscow School of Semiotics
  26. Scientific Dialogue in Lotmanian Semiotics: From Language to Languages
  27. Part Five Special Section for Cognitive Semiotics
  28. CogSem Notes III
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