An introduction to the application of social semiotics in film analysis

Authors
1 master of communication /Iran Broadcasting University
2 هیئت علمی/دانشگاه صداوسیمای تهران
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is the criticism of social semiotics in film analysis. Social semiotics which is based on Holliday votes abandoned the contractual relationship between signifier and signified and considers it as constitutive of social relations. Among those who have applied the visual analysis of social semiotics are Kress and Van Leeuwen. Therefore, this article answers the question which are the capabilities and limitations of the social semiotics in film analysis considering their method in film analysis? To provide the method, library resources were used and semiotic analysis was conducted as an example of a scene from the series “Song of Territory ". Finally, study after the expression of different views on the method has concluded that the use of semiotic resources instead of signs, the possibility of analyzing multimodal texts, and critical view are the strengths and being descriptive, laborious and cultural constraints of the method are weaknesses of this approach.
Keywords

Bateman, J. Delin, J., & Henschel, R. (2004). Multimodality and empiricism:Preparing for a corpus-based approach to the study of multimodal meaning-making. In E. Ventola, C. Charles, & M. Kaltenbacher, Perspectives on Multimodality (pp. 65-87). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Böck, M., Pachler, N, & Kress, G. R. (2013). Multimodality and Social Semiosis  Communication, Meaning-Making and Learning in the Work of Gunther Kress. New York  Routledge.
Forceville, C. (1999). Educating the eye? Kress and Van Leeuwen's Reading Images: The Grammar of Visual Design (1996). Language and Literature,Volume: 8 issue: 2, 163-178.
Hassan, H., & Leeuwen, T. v. (2008). Semiotic Analysis: Compositional Meaning of Corporate Web Pages. In H. Habil, & H. Hassan, New perspectives in language and communication research (pp. 39-52). Skudai: UTM.
Jensen, K. B. (1997, 11 01). The Social Semiotics of Mass Communication. Retrieved from The Canadian Journal of Communication: http://www.cjc-online.ca/index.php/journal/article/view/983/889
Volume 8, Issue 31
Winter 2020
Pages 65-102

  • Receive Date 08 February 2020