The Social Semiotics of Tattoos: Skin and Self: Bloomsbury Advances in Semiotics
Autor Chris William Martinen Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 iun 2020
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Paperback (1) | 223.58 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
Bloomsbury Publishing – 24 iun 2020 | 223.58 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350169067
ISBN-10: 1350169064
Pagini: 224
Ilustrații: 50 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.31 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Bloomsbury Advances in Semiotics
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350169064
Pagini: 224
Ilustrații: 50 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.31 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Bloomsbury Advances in Semiotics
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
A multimodal account of tattoos and tattooing examining meaning-making in the visual, written, spoken, and other elements involved in the practice of tattooing the skin
Notă biografică
Chris William Martin is Professor of Social Sciences at Algonquin College, Canada.
Cuprins
Introduction1: Tattoos and Tattooing in an Era of Liquid Modernity 2. The Art and Artist Behind Your Tattoo3. Tattoo Artists as Artists 4. Permanence as Rebellion: Skin and Self5. Of Cultural Change and Gendered Bodies6. Tattoos as Artistic and Emotional Signifiers Conclusions BibliographyMethodological Appendix Index
Recenzii
Well written and very engaging ... A very strong ethnographic text which fuses together social semiotics and ethnography in a very accessible form.
I thought I knew everything about the semiotics of tattoos, given that I have been teaching the discipline for over four decades. But this book has opened my eyes to new ways of grasping the meanings of tattoos in the world today. While it takes a historical foray into the meanings of tattoos, the book projects us into the current system of coding that tattoos evoke. It is a brilliant and refreshing new treatment of a topic that I thought had been laid to rest.
Chris William Martin's new book, The Social Semiotics of Tattoos: Skin and Self, is a welcome new addition to the literature on tattooing. After almost 30 years worth of scholarship on the subject, much of which has been focused on deviance (or the shift away from it), the time is right for a new analysis of tattooing as an art and profession, within a context of rapid cultural change. The Social Semiotics of Tattoos is a must for anyone interested in tattoos, bodies, or art.
As a tattooed sociologist and a tattoo enthusiast, I found this book to be highly engaging from a number of different perspectives. In addition to its specific contribution to tattoo scholarship, the work also contributes to theory, specifically to social semiotics, and methodology, specifically to ethnographic research.
Chris Martin has written an absorbing study on the sociological and semiotic facets of tattooing. This book is based not only on his semiotic training and scholarship but also on the author's own immersion and fieldwork within the tattooing and body art sub-culture. He makes a persuasive case for tattoos as anchors of meaning and identity construction in a dizzying and mercurial Liquid Modern world. He does so with great passion but roots this in close and critical reading of diverse examples. This book will help you appreciate the profundity of both the art and craft of tattooing. As someone who has overlooked tattoos as semiotic entity, his book has opened my eyes to the power of the ink!
Accomplish[es] a movement of tattoo studies beyond the reductive, reactionary stereotypes that keep lingering on and in doing so help[s] to pave the way for more respectful and rigorous analysis of this complex and significant art form.
I thought I knew everything about the semiotics of tattoos, given that I have been teaching the discipline for over four decades. But this book has opened my eyes to new ways of grasping the meanings of tattoos in the world today. While it takes a historical foray into the meanings of tattoos, the book projects us into the current system of coding that tattoos evoke. It is a brilliant and refreshing new treatment of a topic that I thought had been laid to rest.
Chris William Martin's new book, The Social Semiotics of Tattoos: Skin and Self, is a welcome new addition to the literature on tattooing. After almost 30 years worth of scholarship on the subject, much of which has been focused on deviance (or the shift away from it), the time is right for a new analysis of tattooing as an art and profession, within a context of rapid cultural change. The Social Semiotics of Tattoos is a must for anyone interested in tattoos, bodies, or art.
As a tattooed sociologist and a tattoo enthusiast, I found this book to be highly engaging from a number of different perspectives. In addition to its specific contribution to tattoo scholarship, the work also contributes to theory, specifically to social semiotics, and methodology, specifically to ethnographic research.
Chris Martin has written an absorbing study on the sociological and semiotic facets of tattooing. This book is based not only on his semiotic training and scholarship but also on the author's own immersion and fieldwork within the tattooing and body art sub-culture. He makes a persuasive case for tattoos as anchors of meaning and identity construction in a dizzying and mercurial Liquid Modern world. He does so with great passion but roots this in close and critical reading of diverse examples. This book will help you appreciate the profundity of both the art and craft of tattooing. As someone who has overlooked tattoos as semiotic entity, his book has opened my eyes to the power of the ink!
Accomplish[es] a movement of tattoo studies beyond the reductive, reactionary stereotypes that keep lingering on and in doing so help[s] to pave the way for more respectful and rigorous analysis of this complex and significant art form.