(short) Myth (Roland Barthes) (7)

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 2 people
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/9

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

10 Terms

1
New cards

Standard associations with the term ‘myth’: stories about gods and heroes

Roland Barthes’ concept of myth:

• broader

• myth not necessarily a story

• rather: way which certain words, signs or images and the meanings conventionally associated with them, can be used to influence people

• The connotations or associations produced in making sense of words, signs or images can then be mythical.

2
New cards

Barthes’ theory has a linguistic basis:

✓ semiotics

− anything can be used as a sign conveying meaning

(words, traffic sings, images, music...).

→ His theory on myth is broader than his ‘Rhetoric of the Image’, since it includes other forms of ‘texts’, too.

3
New cards

Barthes bases his understanding of myth on the linguistic sign which is made up of

  • the signifier and

  • the signified

4
New cards

the signifier

  • the word we read on a page

    • the sound we hear

    • the icon of something

5
New cards

the signified

  • what the word/sound image/icon refers to

6
New cards

Why is the connection between signifier and signified considered arbitrary?

  • because, not logical or inherent.


  • Enfglish: 'tree' for a large plant with a trunk, branches, and leaves was constructed and agreed upon at some point.

7
New cards

What example illustrates the arbitrariness of the signifier and signified relationship?

  • The name 'tree' in the English language is not inherent to the plant itself

    → was constructed arbitrarily

  • This becomes evident when comparing it to other languages that have very different names for the same plant.

8
New cards

How does myth work with signs?

  • Myth works with connotations and associations that we immediately have when encountering signs, such as words or images.

9
New cards

What is significant about these connotations and associations?

  • These connotations and associations seem natural or logical but are actually constructed and naturalized.

  • They can be exploited to ‘sell’ particular products or worldviews/ideologies.

10
New cards

Roland Barthes' Concept of Myth

How does advertising manage to link the associations on the level of myth with the product?

✓ introduces a clearly recognisable sign with fairly obvious (positive) associations

physical closeness of the product to the sign on the primary level of myth

analogies in shape/colour between the product and the sign on the primary level of myth

✓ use of linguistic ambiguity (e.g. puns)