History, Signing in: Essays in History and SemioticsHistory, Singing in is a double-entendre indicating the dual purpose of this book. First it marks the initial effort by a practicing historian to demonstrate the usefulness of semiotics for the discipline of history. Second, the essays in this volume on Charles S. Peirce, predecessors and successors of Peirce in the United States, the interpretation of historical texts such as Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, and the historical significance of music and film illustrate the working of signs in both history and the interpretation of history by great thinkers. |
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Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Charles S Peirce and Arisbe | 17 |
Charles S Peirce Historian and Semiotician | 53 |
Copyright | |
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action American appears argued Becker become beginning believe called century Charles Christian church civilization concerning considered Constitution course created critical death discussion economic equality essay example existence experience fact final force French Gance hand historian hoped human ideas important individual insisted intellectual interests interpretation issues Italy James John Juliette justice knowledge letter liberty Lieber lives look means mind moral Napoleon nature never noted opera Peirce Peirce Papers Peirce's performance philosophy political possible practical present question reality reason references representative republic Revolution revolutionary semiotic sense signs social society stamps symbols theory things thought Thucydides traditional true truth turn understand United University University Press Veblen Walker writing York