The Newcastle Critical Discourse Group are pleased to welcome Simon McKerrell (Newcastle University) for our next seminar on Wednesday 26th February. Simon's talk will take place at 3pm in room 3.38, Armstrong Building, Newcastle University. Title and abstract below.
'Music and the Body in Multimodal Semiotics'
Simon McKerrell (Newcastle University)
Music is many things, but it is most definitely not a language. It is however, quite often experienced as powerful non-verbal communication that offers us heightened, intense and deeply felt meanings in our lives. As such, it is fundamental to any understanding of social semiotics, and therefore to the multimodal understanding of meaning construction in today’s increasingly multimedia societies. Musicological aesthetics has been a niche pursuit for decades, but recently, the convergence of neuro-cognitive science with pragmatist philosophy has led to a reconsideration of the role of embodied meaning in language and art (Shusterman 2012; Johnson 2007). In this paper I aim to outline some ideas that might begin to enhance homologous and binary multimodal analysis with a theoretical framework that begins from within the body, dependent upon the somatic bedrock of meaning to provide a basis for the analysis of music and sound within multimedia texts. Thus music is not referential, it is constitutive; fast music does not represent excitement, it induces it within us. Drawing upon Johnson’s (2007) framework of musical movement, I will argue that when we hear music and make meaning, we do so somatically within the body, by enacting several broad, unnuanced feelings, which are simultaneously semiotically nuanced by our own individual cultural experience. The prize is a much firmer intellectual and visceral foundation for multimodal analysis that relies upon our cultured bodies and insists on a shared set of basic immanent embodied meanings. In this way, I hope to move towards a more analytically robust theorization of music and multimodality which allows for the sorts of powerful and thickly semiotic sonic texts we experience today.
http://www.criticaldiscoursegroup.net/
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