Unit 2. Semiotic and Multimodal Approaches Signs, Symbols, and Metaphor
Unit 2. Semiotic and Multimodal Approaches Signs, Symbols, and Metaphor
Unit 2. Semiotic and Multimodal Approaches Signs, Symbols, and Metaphor
SEMIOTIC AND
MULTIMODAL APPROACHES
Signs, Symbols, and
Metaphor
eng 111
Objectives
1. Describe symbolism and metaphor
2. Define semiotics and multimodality;
3. identify multimodal texts;
4. analyze the semiotics of posters/ magazine covers;
5. analyze the multimodality of a video/ music video/ Vlog
/tv show; and
6. analyze the given texts using the two approaches.
This is an example
of a symbol the
skull and
crossbones which
can be symbolize;
as poison, pirates
and death
Lesson 1. Symbolism and Metaphor in Art
Visual Symbols
The term ‘symbolism’ was first coined in 1886 to
describe poetry but was soon used to describe visual
art where ideas, psychological content and meaning
took precedence over the realistic depiction of the
natural world.
TEXT BOOKS
POSTER
Live multimodal texts
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SuawQuLT8Io
Digital multimodal texts (digital stories)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKda3fS_8pc
Digital multimodal texts (short film)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uaWA2GbcnJU
Each mode uses unique semiotic resources to create
meaning (Kress, 2010). In a visual text, for example,
representation of people, objects, and places can be
conveyed using choices of visual semiotic resources such
as line, shape, size, line and symbols, while written
language would convey this meaning through
sentences using noun groups and adjectives (Callow,
2013) which are written or typed on paper or a screen.
(For further information, see Anstey and Bull, 2009;
Callow, 2013; Cloonan, 2011, Kalantzis, Cope, Chan, and
Dalley-Trim, 2016.)
• Multimodal is the combination of two or more of
these modes to create meaning.(combination of
written language, still image, and spatial design)
•Most of the texts that we use are multimodal,
including picture books, text books, graphic novels,
films, e-posters, web pages, and oral storytelling as
they require different modes to be used to make
meaning.
•Each individual mode uses unique semiotic resources
to create meaning (Kress, 2010) and teaching of
these needs to be explicit.