Affiliation:
1. Dept. of English, American and Romance Studies, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen52062, Germany
Abstract
AbstractThis paper presents an account of how Peirce’s Universal Categories (UCs) of perception and experience may, as heuristic principles, inform gesture theory and multimodal analysis. Peirce’s UCs – Firstness (possibility), Secondness (actuality), and Thirdness (law, habit) – constitute the core of his phenomenology and thus also the foundation of his triadic semiotics. I argue that compared to the basic sign-object relations icon, index, symbol mainly used in previous gesture research, the more fundamental UCs allow one to discern additional facets of how coverbal gestures act as signs. This notably pertains to the phenomenology, multidimensionality, and multifunctionality of gesture. The guiding assumption is that compared to Thirdness-laden linguistic symbols constituting written, spoken or signed discourses, gestures may exhibit the UCs to more strongly varying degrees and in different, modality-specific ways. The multimodal analyses discussed in the paper show how Firstness tends to draw attention to the articulatory qualities of gestural signs, including aesthetic and affective strata, Secondness to their experiential grounding and contextualized meaning, and Thirdness to embodied habits of perceiving, feeling, (inter-)acting, thinking, and communicating with others. I further suggest that particularly through interacting with embodied image schemata and force dynamics, such habits may give rise to flexible regularities and schematicity in gesture.
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
18 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Motion-Tracking Technology for the Study of Gesture;The Cambridge Handbook of Gesture Studies;2024-04-18
2. A Toolbox of Methods for Gesture Analysis;The Cambridge Handbook of Gesture Studies;2024-04-18
3. Iconicity, Schematicity, and Representation in Gesture;The Cambridge Handbook of Gesture Studies;2024-04-18
4. Towards an Ecology of Gesture: A Review (And Some Promising Paths);Philosophy of Engineering and Technology;2024
5. Levels of metaphor in gesture;Pragmatics & Cognition;2023-12-31