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E-grāmata: Talking Images: The Interface between Drawing and Writing

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"This innovative collection offers a holistic portrait of the multimodal communication potential of images from the Upper Paleolithic times through to today, showcasing image-based creativity throughout the centuries. The volume seeks to extend the boundaries of our understanding of what language and writing can do to show how language can be understood as part of broader codes and how images and figural objects can contribute to meaning-making in communication. The book is divided into four parts, each exploring a different dimension of the interplay between representation, symbolic meaning, and perception in the study of images and drawing on case studies from around the world. The first section looks at cognitive approaches to the earliest symbol-making while the second considers the interaction between images and writing in early scripts. The third section addresses images outside their boxes, showcasing how ancient communication devices can be reinterpreted. A final section features chapters reflecting on embodied semiotic approaches to the representation of images. This book will be of interest to scholars in semiotics, archaeology, cognitive psychology, and linguistic and cultural anthropology"--

This innovative collection offers a holistic portrait of the multimodal communication potential of images from the Upper Paleolithic through to today, showcasing image-based creativity throughout the centuries.

The volume seeks to extend the boundaries of our understanding of what language and writing can do to show how language can be understood as part of broader codes, as well as how images and figural objects can contribute to meaning-making in communication. The book is divided into four parts, each exploring a different dimension of the interplay between representation, symbolic meaning, and perception in the study of images, drawing on case studies from around the world. The first part looks at cognitive approaches to the earliest symbol-making while the second considers the interaction between images and writing in early scripts. The third part addresses images outside their boxes, showcasing how ancient communication devices can be reinterpreted. The final part features chapters reflecting on embodied semiotic approaches to the representation of images.

This book will be of interest to scholars in semiotics, archaeology, cognitive psychology, and linguistic and cultural anthropology.



This innovative collection offers a holistic portrait of the multimodal communication potential of images from the Upper Paleolithic times through to today, showcasing image-based creativity throughout the centuries and will be of interest to scholars in semiotics, archaeology, cognitive psychology, and linguistic and cultural anthropology.

Contents

List of Contributors

List of Plates

List of Figures

Acknowledgements

Introduction: Can Images Talk? (Silvia Ferrara and Ludovica Ottaviano)

Part 1: The Earliest Images, Symbols, and Cognition

1. Marks, Signs, Symbols: Behavioural Modernity and the Early Homo sapiens
(Enza Elena Spinapolice)

2. Between Nature and Culture: Interpreting Changes in Human Representations
During the Early Neolithic in Northern Mesopotamia (Marion Benz and Joachim
Bauer)

Part 2: When Images Interact with Writing

3. Images Hidden in Script: The Invention of Writing in Ancient Iran (Kathryn
Kelley)

4. Emblem Glyphs: Orthography and the Political World of Classic Maya Scribes
(Mallory E. Matsumoto)

Part
3. Images Outside their Boxes

5. Europes Other Writing: Ominous Hieroglyphics and Belated Ekphrasis in
the 19th Century (Christopher Pinney)

6. Aghori - The Voyage of an Anti-Hero: Comic Book Images and the Art of
Storytelling (Roma Chatterji)

Part 4: Representing Images through Lines, Bodies and Language

7. Art from Calligraphy: Chinese Writing Turns into Pictorial Images,
Performative Actions, Design Products, and Graffiti Works (Adriana Iezzi)

8. Facial Scripts: The Semiotic Journey of Maori Tattoos from Colonial Gaze
to Cultural Revival (Massimo Leone)

9. From Expressive Sign to Denotative Sign: On Some Semiotic Passages
Connected to the Invention of Writing (Claudio Paolucci)

Epilogue: Images Talking Through Time and Space (Mattia Cartolano)

Index
Silvia Ferrara is Professor of Philology and Civilizations of the Aegean and Pre-Classical Mediterranean in the Department of Classical Philology and Italian Studies at Alma Mater Studiorum, University of Bologna, Italy.

Mattia Cartolano is a post-doctoral researcher in the Department of Classical Philology and Italian Studies at Alma Mater Studiorum, University of Bologna, Italy.

Ludovica Ottaviano is a post-doctoral researcher in the Department of Classical Philology and Italian Studies at Alma Mater Studiorum, University of Bologna, Italy.