Current conceptions of meaning and culture tend toward extreme forms of disembodied abstraction, indicating an alienation from the original, earthy meaning of the word culture. I turn to the earlier meanings of the word and why the “cultic,” the living impulse to meaning, was and remains essential to a conception of culture as semeiosis or sign-action. Culture and biology are often treated by social scientists as though they were oil and water, not to be mixed. I am fully aware of the assumed nature-culture dichotomy, but I reject it, not because I am a sociobiologist, quite the contrary, but rather because I am a semiotician, and my studies of signs have led me toward a critical reconstruction of the concepts of nature and culture. ...
Culture is a set of symbolic devices and works that define human activity and the importance of this...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available ...
If you are not sure what ‘culture’ means, you are not alone. In 1952, anthropologists Kroeber and Kl...
Current conceptions of meaning and culture tend toward extreme forms of disembodied abstraction, ind...
The aim of this paper is to probe the conception, widespread in the humanities and the social scienc...
The culture concept has been called one of the most important, if not the most important, concept in...
James F. McDonalds Cultural Flesh – Social Metabolism: The Corporal Nature of Collective Forms....
We believe that a useful, complete theory of culture is simpler than the dichotomies promoted by the...
Since its identification as a unique field of research, the modern study of culture has become very ...
The central concept of anthropology as a humanistic discipline is that of culture. The use of "cultu...
While the term ‘culture’ has come to be very widely used in both popular and academic discourse, it ...
Despite major criticism leveled against its use in anthropology and the other social sciences, the c...
The article presents a unusual take on the subject of culture not from the point of view its interna...
Much of the work in intercultural communication studies in the past decade, especially in the field ...
1 Concepts of Culture – The Plurality of the Concept of Culture As early as in classical antiquity, ...
Culture is a set of symbolic devices and works that define human activity and the importance of this...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available ...
If you are not sure what ‘culture’ means, you are not alone. In 1952, anthropologists Kroeber and Kl...
Current conceptions of meaning and culture tend toward extreme forms of disembodied abstraction, ind...
The aim of this paper is to probe the conception, widespread in the humanities and the social scienc...
The culture concept has been called one of the most important, if not the most important, concept in...
James F. McDonalds Cultural Flesh – Social Metabolism: The Corporal Nature of Collective Forms....
We believe that a useful, complete theory of culture is simpler than the dichotomies promoted by the...
Since its identification as a unique field of research, the modern study of culture has become very ...
The central concept of anthropology as a humanistic discipline is that of culture. The use of "cultu...
While the term ‘culture’ has come to be very widely used in both popular and academic discourse, it ...
Despite major criticism leveled against its use in anthropology and the other social sciences, the c...
The article presents a unusual take on the subject of culture not from the point of view its interna...
Much of the work in intercultural communication studies in the past decade, especially in the field ...
1 Concepts of Culture – The Plurality of the Concept of Culture As early as in classical antiquity, ...
Culture is a set of symbolic devices and works that define human activity and the importance of this...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available ...
If you are not sure what ‘culture’ means, you are not alone. In 1952, anthropologists Kroeber and Kl...