Shakespeare's first sonnet: Reading through repetitions
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Yair Neuman
Yair Neuman (b. 1968) is an associate professor at Ben-Gurion University 〈yneuman@bgu.ac.il 〉. His research interests include semiotics, psychology, psychoanalysis, and information technology. His publications includeReviving the living: Meaning making in living systems (2008).
Abstract
Repetition is of interest to both psychoanalysis and poetry. In this paper, I read Shakespeare's first sonnet through a unique form of repetition – the rhyme. More specifically, and from a semiotic perspective, I read the rhyme in Shakespeare's sonnet as a sign uncovering unconscious conflicts concerning objects' relations. This interpretation locates banned masturbation, a major theme of the sonnet, within three resonating threads: the socio-cultural context, the psychological context of internal object relationships, and the context of poetic creativity.
About the author
Yair Neuman (b. 1968) is an associate professor at Ben-Gurion University 〈yneuman@bgu.ac.il〉. His research interests include semiotics, psychology, psychoanalysis, and information technology. His publications include Reviving the living: Meaning making in living systems (2008).
©[2013] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Qu'est-ce qu'une fiction cubiste ? La “construction textuelle du point de vue” dans L'Herbe et La Route des Flandres
- Lostology: Transmedia storytelling and expansion/compression strategies
- Semiotics at the crossroads of art
- Semioethics and translation as communication in and across genres
- Shakespeare's first sonnet: Reading through repetitions
- Visual grammar in practice: Negotiating the arrangement of speech bubbles in storyboards
- Semiotics and Knowledge Management (KM): A theoretical and empirical approach
- The analysis of Licheń's Holy Icon as a case study in semiotic fortition
- Types of dialogue: Echo, deaf, and dialectical
- Borges and the construction of “reality”
- Advanced literacy and the place of literary semantics in secondary education: A tool of fictional analysis
- Peirce, Leibniz, and the threshold of pragmatism
- The devil in the sheaves: Ergotism in Southern Italy
- Biosemiotic scenarios
- Reflecting on human language through computer languages