In this commentary I reflect upon the conceptualisation of human meaning-making, utilised in the two target articles, that relies heavily on speech as the main mode of semiosis and considers time only in its chronological form. Instead I argue that human existence is embodied and lived through multiple modalities, and involves not only sequential experience of time, but also experience of emergence. In order to move towards a conception of meaning-making that takes this into account, I introduce the social-semiotic theory of multimodality (Kress 2010) and discuss notions of ‘real duration’ (Bergson 1907/1998) and ‘lived time’ (Martin-Vallas 2009). I argue that dialogical (idiographic) researchers need to develop analytic and methodological ...
Bakhtin (1990) observed that looking into a mirror can be a ghostly and unsettling experience. In th...
This chapter provides a rationale for a multimodal perspective on meaning, communication and discou...
Multimodality’s popularity as a semiotic approach has not resulted in a common voice yet. Its concep...
In this commentary I reflect upon the conceptualisation of human meaning-making, utilised in the two...
This article has the following two overarching aims. First, it traces the development of multimodal ...
É crescente o interesse pelas pesquisas que investigam a multiplicidade de linguagem, modos ou semio...
This commentary focuses on König's (2009) work as an opportunity to elaborate on selfhood as a dynam...
This article commences by paying attention to the dual role of signs, as physical subjects and commu...
In this paper, I propose a shift in analytic focus from language to artifacts – that is, to personal...
In this chapter, we present a plea for a stronger inclusion of two strands of research in Cognitive ...
This article addresses functional-pragmatic and cognitive-semiotic issues of emergent meaning-making...
In this paper, I propose a shift in analytic focus from language to artifacts – that is, to persona...
- Introduction: multimodality, meaning making, and the issue of “text” - “Why did dinosaurs evolve f...
Humans are complex systems, ‘macro-entities’, whose existence, behaviour and consciousness stem out ...
Multimodality’s popularity as a semiotic approach has not resulted in a common voice yet. Its concep...
Bakhtin (1990) observed that looking into a mirror can be a ghostly and unsettling experience. In th...
This chapter provides a rationale for a multimodal perspective on meaning, communication and discou...
Multimodality’s popularity as a semiotic approach has not resulted in a common voice yet. Its concep...
In this commentary I reflect upon the conceptualisation of human meaning-making, utilised in the two...
This article has the following two overarching aims. First, it traces the development of multimodal ...
É crescente o interesse pelas pesquisas que investigam a multiplicidade de linguagem, modos ou semio...
This commentary focuses on König's (2009) work as an opportunity to elaborate on selfhood as a dynam...
This article commences by paying attention to the dual role of signs, as physical subjects and commu...
In this paper, I propose a shift in analytic focus from language to artifacts – that is, to personal...
In this chapter, we present a plea for a stronger inclusion of two strands of research in Cognitive ...
This article addresses functional-pragmatic and cognitive-semiotic issues of emergent meaning-making...
In this paper, I propose a shift in analytic focus from language to artifacts – that is, to persona...
- Introduction: multimodality, meaning making, and the issue of “text” - “Why did dinosaurs evolve f...
Humans are complex systems, ‘macro-entities’, whose existence, behaviour and consciousness stem out ...
Multimodality’s popularity as a semiotic approach has not resulted in a common voice yet. Its concep...
Bakhtin (1990) observed that looking into a mirror can be a ghostly and unsettling experience. In th...
This chapter provides a rationale for a multimodal perspective on meaning, communication and discou...
Multimodality’s popularity as a semiotic approach has not resulted in a common voice yet. Its concep...