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Lady Welby: Significs and the interpretive mind

  • Deana Neubauer

    Deana Neubauer (b.1976) is a PhD student and lecturer at London Metropolitan University 〈d.neubauer@londonmet.ac.uk〉. Her interests include nineteenth century English literature, cultural studies, semiotics and biosemiotics, and German philosophy of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Her publications include “The biosemiotic imagination: A response to the effects of enlightened reason in Welby and Newman” (2008); “From a mechanistic to a natural interpretation of the world: A biosemiotic perspective (2011); and “Sympathy” (2012).

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Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 23. August 2013

Abstract

Victorian epistemological debates surrounding the role of language and the relation between thought processes and knowledge, and therefore consciousness, were the legacy of the linguistic turn that took place at the end of the eighteenth century when the philosophical, a priori method of understanding language was abandoned for a historical, a posteriori one. In the nineteenth century, language was no longer conceived as a fixed form, but as a growing and developing medium. It was this shift in understanding that gave a model of thought for Darwin's evolutionary theory and that afforded new depths of investigation. It was against this backdrop that Lady Welby elaborated her significs theory of language, sign, and meaning. She focused on the interrelation between signs, meaning, and value, not only at the level of verbal language, but throughout the universe to show a fundamental continuity between the natural and cultural world as she believed that the universe is permeated with meaning.

About the author

Deana Neubauer

Deana Neubauer (b.1976) is a PhD student and lecturer at London Metropolitan University 〈〉. Her interests include nineteenth century English literature, cultural studies, semiotics and biosemiotics, and German philosophy of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Her publications include “The biosemiotic imagination: A response to the effects of enlightened reason in Welby and Newman” (2008); “From a mechanistic to a natural interpretation of the world: A biosemiotic perspective (2011); and “Sympathy” (2012).

Published Online: 2013-08-23
Published in Print: 2013-08-15

©[2013] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston

Artikel in diesem Heft

  1. Masthead
  2. Introduction
  3. Lady Welby and Lady Petrilli
  4. Victoria Lady Welby – A pioneer of semiotic thought rediscovered by Susan Petrilli
  5. The life of significance: Cultivating ingenuity no less than signs
  6. Mother sense and the image schema of the gift
  7. Signification, common knowledge, and womanhood: The significs of Lady Victoria Welby and beyond
  8. Science: The question of its limits
  9. Susan Petrilli's archival research on Victoria Welby and its implications for future scholarly inquiry
  10. The “dialogue” between Victoria Lady Welby and Mikhail Bakhtin – Reading Susan Petrilli's Signifying and Understanding
  11. Christine Ladd-Franklin's and Victoria Welby's correspondence with Charles Peirce
  12. Tracing signs of a developing science: On the correspondence between Victoria Lady Welby and Charles S. Peirce
  13. Signs, senses and cognition: Lady Welby and contemporary semiotics
  14. Space and time: Continuity in the correspondence between Charles Peirce and Victoria Welby
  15. Significs and semiotics: Chronicle of an encounter foretold
  16. Hic et nunc: Evidence from canine zoosemiotics
  17. Lady Welby: Significs and the interpretive mind
  18. The translating and signifying subject as homo interpres and homo significans: Victoria Welby's concept of translation – a polyfunctional tool
  19. Semiosis and intersemiotic translation
  20. Signs, translation, and life in the Bakhtin circle and in Welby's significs
  21. Significs and mathematics: Creative and other subjects
  22. The sense, meaning, and significance of the Twin International Covenants on Political and Economic Rights
  23. Significal Designs: Translating for meanings that truly matter
  24. Mysticism and mind in Welby's significs
  25. On the translatability of liturgical texts: A significal perspective
  26. Money and metaphor in Welby Prize winner F. Tönnies' “Philosophical terminology”: Some critical considerations
  27. Lady Welby and logic
  28. Willing science – observing nature: Welby and Latour lift the veil
  29. In search of the other: Reading Victoria Welby's significs
  30. The aphasic utterance: A significal perspective
  31. The articulate music of language in The King's Speech
  32. Applying significs
  33. Presentation: Two texts at the beginning of a research itinerary. From significs to semioethics
  34. Theory of meaning and theory of knowledge: Vailati and Welby
  35. Sign and meaning in Victoria Welby and Mikhail Bakhtin: A confrontation
  36. Early recognitions of Welby's significs and the movement it inspired in the Netherlands
Heruntergeladen am 15.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/sem-2013-0058/html
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