Thursday, August 1, 2013

The Significance of the Signified




Description


Ferdinand de Saussure (1857-1913) was a Swiss professor of linguistics who changed the way language is understood. He was a peer of Freud, Durkheim, Darwin and Marx.


Saussure argued that meaning is created inside language in the relations of difference between its parts.

In the image below, our mind conjures up two images; (1) Michael Jackson's famous dance moves and (2) a Cancer awareness ribbon. 

For Saussure, the meaning exists somewhere between the two, i.e., the place where we fill in a connection with the personal meanings we associate to each concept as well as with their relationship to one another.


Particular concepts of interest here include:
  • Semiotics: The study of signs.
  • Langue (language) and Parole (speech): The system of language and utterances. (Langue refers to the system of rules and conventions which is independent of, and pre-exists, and parole refers to its use in particular instances. In semiotics, this principle could be applied to understand the distinction between code and message). 
  • Signifier and Signified: The components of a sign.
  • Synchrony and Diachrony: Meaning of signs.
  • Syntagm and Paradigm: Relationships between signs.


Saussure's approach was to study the system 'synchronically' as if it were frozen in time (like a comic) - rather than 'diachronically' - in terms of its evolution over time.



He argued that 'concepts... are defined not positively, in terms of their content, but negatively by contrast with other items in the same system. This incongruity is a feature of cartoons, which are visual representations of humorous information.


While not all humorous inventions make us laugh, in particular not the ones that convey more serious issues such as the comic below (read the article here), cartoons and comics have historically served as signifiers of "something else" being signified. 

Mohammad Saba'aneh


Saussure saw society as a system of institution and social norms that form a collective system that provides conditions for meaning-making and hence decisions and actions for individuals.

Mimi and Eunice


The cartoon below depicts a social norm that began with the exercise of power on behalf of powerful affiliations. The fact that this action is common place arouses in individuals the desire for change, which, in turn, serves as the impetus for taking action.


Saussure criticized the philology-based system that studied origins of words and hence started the field of semiotics, defining language as a system of representation (which is akin to talking about a ladder that it is not there).



Saussure's 'theory of the sign' defined a sign as being made up of the matched pair of signifier and signified.



Signifier


The signifier is the pointing finger, the word, or sound-image.

US Propaganda Material (for recruiting)
James Montgomery Flagg (1877-1960)


A word is simply a jumble of letters. The pointing finger is not the star. It is in the interpretation of the signifier that meaning is created, as in the cartoon below wherein the knife serves as a type of pointing finger: the guilt felt in speciesism (discrimination directed toward non-domesticated animals).  


Signified


The signified is the concept, the meaning, the thing indicated by the signifier. It does not have to be a 'real object' but is some referent to which the signifier refers.


In other words, the thing signified is created in the mind of the perceiver and is internal to them. While we share concepts, we do so via signifiers. 



While the signifier is more stable, the signified varies between people and contexts.


Notwithstanding, the signified does stabilize with habit, as the signifier cues thoughts and images from memory.


Discussion


The signifier and signified, while superficially simple, form a core element of semiotics.



Saussure's ideas are contrary to Plato's notion of ideas being eternally stable. Plato saw ideas as the root concept that was implemented in individual instances. A signifier without signified has no meaning, and the signified changes with person and context. For Saussure, even the root concept is malleable.



The relationship between the signifier and the signified is arbitrary (Saussure called this 'unmotivated'). A real object need not actually exist 'out there'. While the letters 'c-a-t' spell cat, they do not embody 'catness'. 


Saussure inverts the usual reflectionist view that the signifier reflects the signified: the signifier creates the signified in terms of the meaning it triggers for us. The meaning of a sign needs both the signifier and the signified as created by an interpreter. A signifier without a signified is noise. A signified without a signifier is impossible.



In a 2008 article written by Satisfactory Comics, the 1956 (#94) edition of Lulu and Alvin is linguistically exposed. The article describes how Lulu and Alvin discover the arbitrary nature of linguistic signification. An excerpt from the article:

 
As you can see, the kids are delighted by the slippage between signifier and signified. 


In this very joyful panel, language is revealed to be a mere construct. Chaos ensues. 


By the time the game is a foot (pun intended), "foot" and "feet" have become so destabilized (pun intended, again) that they can only be conveyed in terms of natural (as opposed to arbitrary) signifiers: a kind of onomatopoeia. 




Language is a series of 'negative' values in that each sign marks a divergence of meaning betweens signs. Words have meaning in both their difference and in their relationships with other words.















I Love Lucy Comics



The 'I Love Lucy' Show

I Love Lucy is an American television sitcom starring Lucille BallDesi ArnazVivian Vance, and William Frawley. The black-and-white series originally ran from October 15, 1951, to May 6, 1957, on the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS). After the series ended in 1957, however, a modified version continued for three more seasons with 13 one-hour specials, running from 1957 to 1960, known first as The Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Show and later in reruns as The Lucy–Desi Comedy Hour.

By the end of its first season, I Love Lucy had been hailed by TV Guide as “the season’s most popular program.” 

During its six-year run, I Love Lucy set many records for television viewership. In April 1952, Episode No. 26, “The Marriage License,” became the first television broadcast seen in more than ten million American households. The show was number one in the Nielsen ratings for four of its six seasons, and it was the first television series ever to finish its run at the top of the ratings. 

I Love Lucy and its cast received twenty-three Emmy Award nominations, winning five times. Ball and Arnaz, already well known in 1951, were lauded as “TV’s First Family” on the April 6, 1953, cover of Life magazine.


Dell Comics

Dell Comics was the comic book publishing arm of Dell Publishing, which got its start in pulp magazines. It published comics from 1929 to 1973. At its peak, it was the most prominent and successful American company in the medium. In 1953 Dell claimed to be the world's largest comics publisher, selling 26 million copies each month.


Dell Comics published 35 issues of an I Love Lucy comic book between 1954 and 1962 including two try-out Four Color issues (#535 and #559). King Features syndicated a comic strip (credited to "Bob Lawrence" but actually written by Lawrence Nadel and drawn by Bob Oksner) from 1952 to 1955. 


I Love Lucy Comics, Vol. 1, no. 1, 1954. Cover. New York: Dell Publications Co., 1954. 
Serial and Government Publications Division, Library of Congress (092.00.00); [Digital ID # lucy0092]

Four Color #535 I Love Lucy (Dell, 1954) CGC FN/VF 7.0 Cream to off-white pages. Photo cover and frontispiece. Overstreet 2006 FN 6.0 value = $150; VF 8.0 value = $400. CGC census 3/06: 4 in 7.0, 8 higher.
Sold for US$325 ($73.13 Buyer's Premium + taxes, fees, etc.)


(Inside Edition #535)


Eternity Comics

Eternity Comics was a California-based comic book publisher active from 1986 to 1994, first as an independent publisher, then as an imprint of Malibu Comics. Eternity published creator-owned comics of an offbeat, independent flavor, as well as some licensed properties. Eternity was also notable for reprinting foreign titles, and introducing Cat ClawThe Jackaroo, and the Southern Squadron to the U.S. market.
Such well-known creators as Brian Pulido, Evan Dorkin, Dale Berry, Ben Dunn, Dean Haspiel, and Ron Lim got their starts with Eternity.

Eternity Comics in the early 1990s issued comic books that reprinted the I Love Lucy strip and Dell comic book series.

"I Love Lucy" (#1); Eternity Comics
(Readers might remember these comics being advertised on 'Nick At Night')


See Inside

Now that the stage is set, let's take a look inside the comics. 




















Psychology of Comics

Source: Caricatura.Ru

INTRODUCTION

This comic is a bit "sharp" (pardon the visual pun), but it is an excellent example of how comics have long since depicted the perceived funniness in a situation that might otherwise arouse passionate discourse. 

Rather than providing a detailed analysis of the challenges surrounding global educational reform, this comic depicts the growing aversion parents, teachers, students, and administrators have toward today's "cookie-cutter" teaching methodologies. 

STYLE OF COMIC CONDUCT

Utilizing Craik and Ware's (2007) table of humorous styles, we can identify the most common traits or components of humor in comics. According to the 10 styles of humorous conduct, the above comic represents a "Socially cold humorous style". 

Negative
  1. Socially cold humorous style
    • Smiles grudgingly. Responds with a quick, but short-lived smile. 
    • Is a ready audience but infrequent contributor of humorous anecdotes. 
    • Has a bland, deadpan sense of humor. 
Vs.

Positive
  1. Socially warm humorous style
    • Maintains group morale through humor. 
    • Has a good sense of humor. 
    • Uses good-natured jests to put others at ease. 
    • Relative to other traits, displays a noteworthy sense of humor. 
A positive alternative to this comic depicts the same "cookie-cutter" or "sardine-like" challenge with a solution that inspires camaraderie among those who have looked to home schooling as an alternative to the situation. 

© Jason Holm (2007)

In addition to the socially warm humorous style Jason Holm's comic presents an alternative to the perceived challenge, this comic demonstrates a more competent humorous style in its witty and ready repartee. This comic presents a clever retort (home schooling alternative) to the problems surrounding mass education.

CHARLES SCHULTZ (1923 - 2000)

Charles Schultz's Peanuts Snoopy and Charlie Brown Daily Comic Strip Original Art dated 8-15-55 (United Feature Syndicate, 1955) is an allegory depicting mainstream reactions to the starch mannerisms of mass educators in the 1950s.

In the Peanuts cartoons, teachers were continually depicted as boring, monotonous, wah, wah, wah-type educators that bored students to tears.

Peanuts Snoopy and Charlie Brown (1955)
Charles Schultz
Drawing, dated "8-15-55"
Hammer price: $ 13,000; €9,015, £7,891
Sales date 08-18-2011
Auction house: Heritage Auctions, USA
Source: Artprice

Good Grief -- the things a dog has to do just to get a treat! 

"I'd always been drawing little dogs in the [Li'l Folks] strip, so I named one Snoopy, the one I would be using the most. The real dog who was the forerunner of Snoopy was named Spike. He was bigger than the beagle that Snoopy turned out to be, but he was kind of a wild dog marked in a way similar to Snoopy." ~Charles Schultz

Part of the charm of the early Snoopy episodes is the much more "realistic" behavior of the beloved beagle. 

Yousuf Karsh
Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery
in recognition of Schultz' impact on millions of people around the world
©2012 CBS Broadcasting Inc.


Charles Schultz, the creator of Peanuts, a renowned American comic strip, served in the army during World War II, later becoming an art school instructor and then a free-lance cartoonist for the St. Paul Pioneer Press and the Saturday Evening Post. 

In 1950, Schulz sold the Peanuts strip to United Features, and it became the most widely-read comic in history, appearing worldwide in over 2,000 newspapers. 









The Art of Overcoming Oneself


Would you like to triumph over any dogma? Would you like to experience a new sense of freedom? Would you like to enjoy unprecedented wide and open vistas? 

Look no further ~ you already have the power within to avoid the temptation of leaping from doubt into faith if you truly wish to retain intellectual integrity. 



The enterprise of overcoming oneself requires a probing intellect that does not slink away from discovery, but instead, delves right into it, examining the psychological motivations of each belief that arises. 

Inspired by a relentless determination to make their motivations a matter of conscience, the overcomer remains faithful to themselves in that which is true. The overcomer does not crave a slavish adherence to their pronouncements but instead has a strength for questioning for which few have the courage. 


Recognizing your own self-portrait requires a thinker who has the ability to abandon societal stereotypes, examine religious beliefs and metaphysical doctrines, and relentlessly probe matters of morality. Relinquishing a past insistence to conform to old standards, the overcomer negates negations, subtracts their belief from the indispensable, and frees themselves from goals of attainment. 

Taking a hammer to historical insights, the overcomer questions the nature of their values, relinquishes their idols, and delights in the recreation of intellectual freedom. 


Overcoming oneself might feel a bit nihilistic to some, but the aim is not to reject all religious and moral principles based on the belief that life is meaningless. That in itself is a belief. Rather, overcoming oneself is a self-liberating experience that has no clear expectations other than the willingness to experiment to determine whether or intellectual integrity is attainable. 

Whatever an overcomer concludes about the world or uncovers within themselves from the vantage of their own mind is now the most unique aspect of their identity. 

No one can explain the world to us without our willingness to extinguish our own thoughts on the matter. No test can prove ultimate truths beyond those we uncover for ourselves. 

"Free your mind" is not just a pithy quote one shares on Facebook, it is a serious undertaking that can lead to the most unserious adventure of one's life.