Ferdinand
De Saussure
1.
Course in General Linguistics
a.
From
Chapter III
i. Language is summarized
as:
1.
The
fusion of a thought and an “auditory image.”
2.
Existing
outside oneself and belonging to the community that shares it.
3.
Having
to be learned.
ii. Language can be studied
on its own.
iii. Language is a system of
signs that fuse meanings and sound-images (auditory image).
1.
Both
parts of language are psychological.
iv. Language is not
abstractions.
1.
Meaning
is agreed upon by the collective.
2.
Meaning
has a reality in the brain.
3.
Linguistic
signs can be reduced to written symbols.
4.
Language
is the storehouse of sound-images, and writing is the tangible form of those
images.
b.
Language
is a system of signs that express ideas and is comparable to writing.
c.
Semiology
– The science that studies the life of signs within society. Possible proposal.
i. Language needs to be
studied in and of itself as it is the medium for understanding.
ii. To understand the nature
of language we need to learn what it has in common with all other sign based
systems.
d.
Part
one, chapter 1.
i. Naming conventions over
simplify language.
1.
It
assumes ready made ideas before words.
2.
It
doesn’t tell us if the name is vocal or psychological.
3.
Assumes
the linking of name to object is a simple task.
ii. Sign – Unites a concept
and a sound image. Not a thing and a
name.
1.
Distinction
is made between the mental sound-images of words and their vocal expression
through phonemes.
2.
A
sign is a two sided psychological entity that is = Concept / Sound Image.
3.
Each
element is linked and recalls the other.
4.
Signifier
and Signified replace the word Sound-image.
a.
Signifier
– The object.
b.
Signified
– The mental construct.
5.
Principle
I: The linguistic sign is arbitrary. It
could be represented in numerous ways but only one has been selected.
a.
Symbols
are not arbitrary as elements describing them are needed to describe them.
b.
Arbitrary
means it has no natural connection with the signified.
6.
Principle
II: The Linear Nature of the Sign.
a.
Since
the signifier is auditory it is linier in the sense that it represents a span
of time in a single direction.
e.
Part
Two, Chapter IV.
i. Language as Organized
Thought Coupled with sound.
ii. Language is represented
by ideas and sounds.
iii. Language doesn’t seek to
express ideas, but to link thought and sound in a way that their unification
can be reproduced.
iv. Language is a way of
ordering thought.
v. Each idea has a sound
that becomes the sign for an idea.
vi. Thought and sound
produce a form, not a substance.
vii. Conceptual values.
1.
Value
and signification are distinct.
2.
Values
are differentiated from words outside itself but in the same language system.
3.
Values
of similar things that can be compared for determination of value.
4.
The
signified is determined by what other signifiers are not.
5.
Conceptual
side of value is made up solely of relations and differences with respect to
the other terms of language.
viii.
Material
values.
1.
It
is the phonic differences that distinguish a word as a signifier.
2.
Sound
is secondary to language.
3.
Signs
in writing are also arbitrary. There is
no connection between a letter and the sounds it make.
4.
The
value of letter is purely negative and differential.
5.
The
letter matters only within the limitations of the system.
ix. The sign considered in
its totality.
1.
Signs
are determined by the meanings of other signs.
2.
Signs
can be modified without changes to themselves, but by changes to other signs
around them.
3.
The
signifier and signified are formed through negative associations, what they are
not.
4.
The
resulting sign becomes a positive and both the signifier and signified become
associated with it. They become
distinct.
x. Syntagmatic and
Associative Relations.
1.
Discourse
– Words acquire relations based on the linear nature of language and they are
chained together.
2.
Syntagm
– linear chains of words.
3.
Outside
Discourse – Words relating to one another.
A word sparks a concept in the mind resulting in associations with
similar words.
4.
Syntagm
relates to words, groups of words, and complex configurations.
5.
Words
and Syntagms manifest numerous mental associations.
Works Cited
Saussure,
Ferdinand De. Course in General
Linguistics. The Norton Anthology of
Theory and Criticism. Ed. Vincent B.
Leitch et al. 2nd ed. New
York: W.W.Norton & Co., 2010. 845-866. Print.
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