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Science in carnival: DNA and the iconic body
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Monica Rector
Published/Copyright:
October 27, 2008
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to discuss the symbolic and metaphoric representation of abstract concepts by the Samba Schools (Escolas-de-Sambas) of the main groups in the carnival parades of Rio de Janeiro (2004). I will focus mainly on the group Unidos da Tijuca that paraded science, emphasizing an extraordinary float that represented the creation of the world through DNA.
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Published Online: 2008-10-27
Published in Print: 2005-06-20
Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG
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Articles in the same Issue
- Semiotic perspective of psychiatric diagnosis
- On the relation between sound and meaning in Hicks’ Snow Falling on Cedars
- The revised fundamental sign
- Maigre comme un hareng : ‘Miss Harriet’ de Guy de Maupassant
- Prosper Mérimée : Surface sémantique d’un récit
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- A semiotics of human actions for wearable augmented reality interfaces
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- An assessment and application of structuralism and linguistics: A structuralist approach to ‘The Woman Who Fell From the Sky,’ a Native American creation myth
- Iconicity and indexicality: The body in Chinese art
- The Human Genome Project: An increasingly elusive ‘human nature’
- Body and space: Michael Chekhov’s notion of atmosphere as the means of creating space in theatre
- Eyes, mirror, light: History’s other lenses