I Think I Am a Verb: More Contributions to the Doctrine of Signs

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Springer Science & Business Media, 11.11.2013 - 246 Seiten
My writing career has been, at least in this one respect, idiosyncratic: it had to mark and chart, step by step, its own peculiar champaign. My earliest papers, beginning in 1942, were technical articles in this or that domain of Uralic linguistics, ethnography, and folklore, with a sprinkling of contributions to North and South American linguistics. In 1954, my name became fecklessly associated with psycholinguistics, then, successively, with explorations in my thology, religious studies, and stylistic problems. It now takes special effort for me to even revive the circumstances under which I came to publish, in 1955, a hefty tome on the supernatural, another, in 1958, on games, and yet another, in 1961, utilizing a computer for extensive sorting of literary information. By 1962, I had edged my way into animal communication studies. Two years after that, I first whiffled through what Gavin Ewart evocatively called "the tulgey wood of semiotics." In 1966, I published three books which tem porarily bluffed some of my friends into conjecturing that I was about to meta morphose into a historiographer of linguistics. The topmost layer in my scholarly stratification dates from 1976, when I started to compile what eventually became my "semiotic tetralogy," of which this volume may supposably be the last. In the language of "Jabberwocky," the word "tulgey" is said to connote variability and evasiveness. This notwithstanding, the allusion seems to me apt.
 

Inhalt

I Think I Am a Verb
1
Evolutionary Considerations
10
Steps toward a New Paradigm
17
Symptom
45
Vital Signs
59
Signs of Life
80
A Hypothesis
82
Dialogue about Signs with a Nobel Laureate
97
Fables of Fact
131
Merry Tailor
133
The Bird that Eats Wax
136
Averse Stance
145
One Two Three Spells Uberty
174
Echoes from the Extraterrestrial
183
Appendixes
189
References
215

Japanese Monkey Performances
117
Can Animals Lie?
126

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