by Anne Freadman (Author)
This radical reevaluation of one of the foundational figures of semiotics presents Peirce as the theorist of the machinery of talk rather than of the mind and its contents. The book is a genealogy of Peirce's writings on signs that seeks to account for the changes displayed across forty years of his work. The author's comprehensive knowledge of Peirce's work brings an incisive understanding to his notoriously elaborate and complex theory of signs, at the same time challenging some standard readings in Peirce scholarship. Freadman introduces the postulate of genre in order to argue that the transformation of materials from one genre in and by the objectives of another can account for the modifications in sign theory observable through the course of Peirce's career. The Machinery of Talk engages on a theoretical level with general issues in semiotics, taking Peirce's writings as a case study through which to investigate the adequacy of a theory of signs to account for the way talk works. It finds that the sign is inadequate without the accompanying postulate of genre.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 352
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Published: 01 Mar 2004
ISBN 10: 0804747407
ISBN 13: 9780804747400