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Cultural Implications of Biosemiotics
Authors:
Cobley, Paul
Springer
Hardcover ISBN
978-94-024-0857-7
eBook ISBN
978-94-024-0858-4
Number of Pages
xv, 139
Number of Illustrations and Tables
3 b/w illustrations
Series Title
Biosemiotics
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
This is the first book to consider the major implications for culture of the new science of biosemiotics. The volume is mainly aimed at an
audience outside biosemiotics and semiotics, in the humanities and social sciences principally, who will welcome elucidation of the possible benefits to their subject area from a relatively new field. The book is therefore devoted to illuminating the extent
to which biosemiotics constitutes an ‘epistemological break’ with ‘modern’ modes of conceptualizing culture. It shows biosemiotics to be a significant departure from those modes of thought that neglect to acknowledge continuity across nature, modes which install
culture and the vicissitudes of the polis at the centre of their deliberations. The volume exposes the untenability of the ‘culture/nature’ division, presenting a challenge to the many approaches that can only produce an understanding of culture as a realm
autonomous and divorced from nature.
- The first book-length study of the implications for culture of biosemiotics
- Provides digestible summaries of the work of key thinkers in biosemiotics, including Deacon, Hoffmeyer, Kull and Sebeok
- Includes chapters on key topics in culture, including ethics, subjectivity, human exceptionalism, the humanities, repression and semiotics
http://www.springer.com/gb/book/9789402408577