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Lecture 08: Semiotic Media Theory

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Title: Lecture 08: Semiotic Media Theory


1
Lecture 08 Semiotic Media Theory
IS 246Multimedia Information
Prof. Marc Davis UC Berkeley SIMS Monday and
Wednesday 330 pm 500 pm Fall
2003 http//www.sims.berkeley.edu/academics/cours
es/is246/f04/
2
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Editing II
  • Semiotic Media Theory
  • The Video Sign
  • Cinematic Articulations
  • Syntagmatic Structures
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

3
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Editing II
  • Semiotic Media Theory
  • The Video Sign
  • Cinematic Articulations
  • Syntagmatic Structures
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

4
Kuleshov Effect
  • Kuleshov Effect
  • Neutral Face ? Soup (Pensive Face)
  • Neutral Face ? Dead Woman (Sad Face)
  • Neutral Face ? Child playing with toy bear
    (Happy Face)
  • How do you describe the face?
  • Video has a dual semantics
  • Sequence-independent stable semantics of shots
  • Sequence-dependent variable semantics of shots

5
Isenhour on Context and Order
  • A1B A2C ? A1 NOT EQUAL A2
  • Shot context affects shot meaning
  • The shot before affects the shot after
  • BA1 CA2 ? A1 NOT EQUAL A2
  • Shot context affects shot meaning
  • The shot after affects the shot before
  • AB NOT EQUAL BA
  • Short order effects shot meaning
  • (AB)C NOT EQUAL A(BC)

6
Burchs Transitions
  • Temporal transitions
  • Continuous
  • Discontinuous
  • Temporal ellipsis
  • Measurable time ellipsis
  • Indefinite time ellipsis
  • Temporal reversal (flashback, overlapping cut)
  • Measurable time reversal
  • Indefinite time reversal

7
Burchs Transitions
  • Spatial transitions
  • Continuous
  • Discontinuous
  • Proximal
  • Radically discontinuous

8
Barthes Action Sequences
  • Consecutive
  • Temporal succession
  • Consequential
  • Causal succession
  • Volitive
  • Action results from an act of will
  • Reactive
  • Causal succession based on stimulus-response
  • Durative
  • Indicating the beginning, ending, or duration of
    an action
  • Equipollent
  • Necessarily paired actions (e.g., asking a
    question and answering a question)

9
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Editing II
  • Semiotic Media Theory
  • The Video Sign
  • Cinematic Articulations
  • Syntagmatic Structures
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

10
Semiotic Media Theory
  • Application of semiotic methods of analysis to
    media, especially cinema
  • Traditionally used for structural and functional
    analysis
  • In computational media (especially automatic film
    editing), used also to define the primitives,
    means of combination, and means of abstraction
    for cinematic synthesis

11
Semiotic Media Theory
  • Key questions for semiotics of cinema
  • How does cinema mean?
  • What are the significant structures of cinematic
    form?
  • What are the various hierarchical levels of these
    structures?
  • How do they compare to linguistic structures?
  • Does cinema have any unique semiotic properties?

12
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Editing II
  • Semiotic Media Theory
  • The Video Sign
  • Cinematic Articulations
  • Syntagmatic Structures
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

13
The Sign
Signified
Signifier
14
The Linguistic Sign
dog
dog
15
The Video Sign
dog
16
Arbitrariness of the Video Sign
  • Theories of video denotation
  • Iconic (i.e., onomatopoetic)
  • Video is a mechanical replication of what it
    represents
  • Arbitrary
  • Video constructs an arbitrary relationship
    between signifier and signified
  • Motivated
  • The relationship between the signifier and
    signified is motivated, but by what?
  • A natural analogy between video and the world?
  • By the conventions of cinematic language?

17
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Editing II
  • Semiotic Media Theory
  • The Video Sign
  • Cinematic Articulations
  • Syntagmatic Structures
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

18
Articulation
  • Articulation
  • Any form of semiotic organization which produces
    distinct combinable units
  • Double articulation in natural language
  • First articulation
  • Morphemes smallest formal units of significance
    (e.g., cow)
  • Constructed out of phonemes
  • Second articulation
  • Phonemes sound units which in and of themselves
    lack significance (e.g., c ow)

19
Commutation
  • Etymologically change together
  • The substitution of one signifier for another
    produces a change of the signified
  • Example in phonemes to morphemes
  • Different pronunciations of the ow in cow
    will still be understood as cow
  • But we distinguish cow caw quay coo cal

20
Cinematic Articulations
  • Metz
  • Cinema has no double articulation because its
    smallest units (shots) are significant
  • Based on Bazinian view of cinema as reproduction
    of reality
  • Eco
  • Cinema has three levels of articulation which
    include sub-shot units
  • Similar to Eisensteinian view of cinema as
    construction of representations

21
Iconic Figures / Semes / Signs
Iconic Figures (deduced from perceptive codes)
constituting a paradigm from which units are
selected to form
Iconic Signs
Iconic Semes
Photograms
22
Ecos Photographic Articulations
  • Iconic semes
  • Example a dark-haired man stands here wearing a
    patterned shirt
  • Iconic signs
  • Example human nose, human eye, shirt, etc.
  • Iconic figures
  • Example angles, light contrasts, curves, etc.

23
Ecos Cinematic Articulations
  • Kinesic semes (kinemorphs)
  • Example Im saying yes to the person on the
    right
  • Kinesic signs (kines)
  • Example Nod head yes
  • Kinesic figures
  • Example move head to right, move head up, move
    head down

24
Kinesic Figures / Kines / Kinemorphs
Iconic Figures
Kines
Kinemorphs
Diachrony
Kinesic Figures
Iconic Signs
Iconic Semes
Photo- grams
Synchrony
25
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Editing II
  • Semiotic Media Theory
  • The Video Sign
  • Cinematic Articulations
  • Syntagmatic Structures
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

26
Metzs Grand Syntagmatique
27
Metzs Grand Syntagmatique
  • Autonomous Shot (single shot)
  • Single-Shot Sequence (complete unto itself)
  • Inserts (differentiated from shot context)
  • Non-diegetic insert
  • A single shot which presents objects exterior to
    the story world
  • Displaced diegetic insert
  • Diegetic images temporally and/or spatially out
    of context
  • Subjective insert
  • Memories, fears, dreams, etc. of character
  • Explanatory insert
  • Single shots which clarify diegetic events

28
Metzs Grand Syntagmatique
  • Achronological Syntagmas
  • Parallel Syntagma (alternating)
  • Two alternating motifs without clear spatial or
    temporal relationship
  • Bracket Syntagma (non-alternating)
  • Brief scenes without temporal sequence but often
    organized around a concept
  • Chronological Syntagmas
  • Descriptive Syntagma (non-narrative)
  • Objects shown to create spatial contiguity to
    situate action
  • Narrative Syntagmas (narrative)

29
Metzs Grand Syntagmatique
  • Narrative Syntagmas
  • Alternate (Narrative) Syntagma
  • Narrative crosscutting showing temporal
    simultaneity (parallel action)
  • Linear (Narrative) Syntagma
  • Scene (continuous)
  • Spatial contiguity and temporal continuity across
    a series of shots
  • Sequences (elliptical)
  • Episodic Sequence
  • Symbolic summary of chronological progression
    usually to compress time (montage sequence)
  • Ordinary Sequence

30
Brian OConnor on Metz
31
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Editing II
  • Semiotic Media Theory
  • The Video Sign
  • Cinematic Articulations
  • Syntagmatic Structures
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

32
Discussion Questions (Barthes)
  • Jaiwant Virk on Barthes
  • If The principle of narrative art it is a
    matter of producing a discourse which best
    satisfies the demand for completeness, then how
    does one define the boundaries of the action
    sequence? How much cultural history does one pack
    to prevent the horror of the vacuum? Or should
    the sequence be completely abandoned to a
    subjective analysis of the reader/viewer?

33
Discussion Questions (Barthes)
  • Jaiwant Virk on Barthes
  • What are the possible factors that can be
    considered to define/label an action sequence for
    media metadata purpose (motion, etc.)?

34
Discussion Questions (Eco)
  • Yongwook Jeong on Eco
  • According to Eco, because all signs are arbitrary
    and conventional, we have to learn how to
    interpret them. This made me have a question
    about whether it is possible to have more than
    one languages of cinema. Does this make it
    possible to distinguish one kind of films from
    another?

35
Discussion Questions (Eco)
  • Yongwook Jeong on Eco
  • Regarding the cinematic code as the only code
    carrying a triple articulation, Eco seems to make
    iconic codes a basis for his cinematic language.
    Can we apply his arguments to today's films?

36
Discussion Questions (Metz)
  • Ryan Shaw on Metz
  • Metz believes that in cinema, unlike in spoken
    language, even the smallest identifiable units
    are complete signs, having a signifier (the
    image) and a signified (the thing which the image
    is depicting). Moreover, unlike in linguistic
    signs, the relationship between the signifier and
    the signified in these signs is motivated by
    perceptual similarities ("the image of a dog is
    like the dog").
  • What implications does Metz's view have for the
    task of programming a computer to understand a
    film? If the smallest analyzable units of cinema
    depend on human perception for their meaning,
    must we solve the problems of computational
    perception before such a task can be undertaken?
    Or might the perceptual motivations of cinematic
    signs be encoded in metadata in such a way that a
    computer could construct an understanding of a
    film, even without the ability to perceive the
    motivations itself?

37
Discussion Questions (Metz)
  • Ryan Shaw on Metz
  • Metz struggles with the application of linguistic
    models to the question of how films are
    understood. His comparisons of linguistics and
    cinema seem to point out more differences than
    similarities, yet he persists in his effort due
    to his belief that the methods of linguistics...
    provide the semiotics of cinema with a constant
    and precious aid in establishing units that...
    are liable over time... to become progressively
    refined.
  • Is this belief justified? Is the semiotics of
    cinema making progress in refining these units?
    Or might it be more useful to stop trying to
    treat cinema as a language and investigate
    other methods (psychological or neurological,
    perhaps)?

38
Todays Agenda
  • Review of Last Time
  • Editing II
  • Semiotic Media Theory
  • The Video Sign
  • Cinematic Articulations
  • Syntagmatic Structures
  • Discussion Questions
  • Action Items for Next Time

39
Metz on Shot/Word Distinction
  • Shots are infinite in number, contrary to words,
    but like statements, which can be formulated in
    verbal language.
  • Shots are the creations of the film-maker, unlike
    words (which pre-exist in lexicons), but similar
    to statements (which are in principle the
    invention of the speaker).
  • The shot presents the receiver with a quantity of
    undefined information, contrary to the word. From
    this point of view, the shot is not even
    equivalent to the sentence. Rather, it is like
    the complex statement of undefined length (how is
    one to describe a film shot completely by means
    of natural language?).
  • The shot is an actualized unit, a unit of
    discourse, an assertion, unlike the word (which
    is a purely virtual lexical unit), but like the
    statement, which always refers to reality or a
    reality (even when it is interrogative or
    jussive). The image of a house does not signify
    house, but Here is a house the image
    contains a sort of index of actualization, by the
    mere fact that it occurs in a film.
  • Only to a small extent does a shot assume its
    meaning in paradigmatic contrast to the other
    shots that might have occurred at the same point
    along the filmic chain (since the other possible
    shots are infinite in number), whereas the word
    is always part of at least one more or less
    organized semantic field. (Metz 1974 115-116).

40
Administrivia
  • You MUST have a SIMS computer account to do
    Assignment 1

41
Readings for Next Time
  • Wednesday 09/29
  • Eisenstein, S.M. Film Form Essays in Film
    Theory. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers,
    San Diego, 1949 pp. 45-63.
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