User:Mxrwho/The Final Project/Bibliography
Cooley, C. H. (1922), Human Nature and the Social Order. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Available at: https://brocku.ca/MeadProject/Cooley/Cooley_1902/Cooley_1902toc.html (Accessed: 22 November 2024).
The dynamics of society and the concept of the "looking-glass self" or how the individual internalizes other people's views (true or perceived) and behaves accordingly.
Dusi, N. (2012) ‘Remaking as a Practice: Some Problems of Transmediality’, Cinéma & Cie. Film and Media Studies Journal, 12(18). Available at: https://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/cinemaetcie/article/view/16255 (Accessed: 22 November 2024).
Repetition as remaking. Its narrative value.
Fellows, J. (2023) 'Making Up a Mimic: Interacting with Echoes in the Age of AI' (2024), Transversal: International Journal for the Historiography of Science, 15, pp. 1-18. Available at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/376670787_Making_Up_a_Mimic_Interacting_with_Echoes_in_the_Age_of_AI (Accessed: 22 November 2024).
Labeling in the age of AI, its categorizing power and our reduced resistance.
Hacking, I. (2006) ‘Making Up People’, London Review of Books, 17 August. Available at: https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v28/n16/ian-hacking/making-up-people (Accessed: 22 November 2024).
Institutional labeling and the fluidity of diagnoses.
Hassan, A. and Barber, S.J. (2021) ‘The effects of repetition frequency on the illusory truth effect’, Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 6(1), p. 38. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1186/s41235-021-00301-5.
How repetition affects beliefs of truth.
How labelling works and how it affects the behavior of the ones labelled.
Tornborg, E. (2020) ‘Repetition in Transmediation: From Painting to Poem and GIF’, AAA: Arbeiten aus Anglistik und Amerikanistik, 45(1), pp. 29–44.
Repetition in different media and how it enriches the message.
Tosca, S. (2023) ‘Many Happy Returns: Sameness in Digital Literature, Narrative Games, Adaptations and Transmedial Worlds’, in Sameness and Repetition in Contemporary Media Culture. Emerald Publishing Limited, pp. 85–112. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80455-952-920231005.
Adaptation as a familiar home that can be re-inhabited. The importance of conciseness.
A phenomenologist approach on language as a contextually situated and experientially grounded semiotic system.
Stress as a novelty factor in the creation of metaphor.
Galer: The languages with built-in sexism
How language affects the way we perceive the world (and gender), with examples from different languages.
Leech: Semantics. The study of meaning
How words and language acquire their meaning. Especially important is the classification of "meaning" in categories:
Conceptual, connotative, social, affective, reflected, collocative, thematic.
Palmer: Semantics. A new outline.
The difference between conceptual and social meaning.
Lyons: Language and Linguistics.
Distinction between descriptive and non-descriptive meaning. The impossibility of defining "meaning" in semantic terms. Main question: What is the meaning of meaning?