Autocommunication and Perceptual Markers in Landscape: Japanese Examples [Book Review]

Biosemiotics 3 (3):359-373 (2010)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

Juri Lotman distinguishes between two main types of communication. In addition to the classical I-YOU communication, he speaks about I-I communication, where both the addresser and the addressee are one and the same person. Contrary to how it sounds, autocommunication is not self-sufficient musing inside one’s self, it is remodelling oneself through a code from an entity outside oneself, be it animate or inanimate. According to Lotman, it is often the rhythmical phenomena like poetry, the rhythm of waves, etc. that lend themselves for the act of autocommunication as external codes. After having received the message one is not identical to the original oneself anymore. Perceptual markers of landscape—specific rhythms, ephemera, the rhythm of human everyday activities, bodily movement—can be considered as a secondary code leading to autocommunication in the person who contemplates the landscape. Looking at the landscape—which also implies the rhythmical movement of the eyes—one uses it as a code to reconstitute oneself. A person who has confronted a landscape does not leave it as the same person. The present article poses a definition of autocommunication in landscapes and discusses the way in which other sensorial information apart from the visual—smell, movement, rhythms etc—are used culturally to reinforce autocommunication with oneself. It can be said that several institutionalised religious and cultural practices expect the subject to reconstitute him- or herself mainly through the bodily landscape experience

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,853

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Author, landscape and communication in Estonian haiku.Kati Lindström - 2002 - Sign Systems Studies 30 (2):653-675.
The rise and fall of the adaptive landscape?Anya Plutynski - 2008 - Biology and Philosophy 23 (5):605-623.
Man in the landscape.Paul Shepard - 1967 - New York,: Knopf; [distributed by Random House].
Culture, landscape, and the environment.Kate Flint & Howard Morphy (eds.) - 2000 - New York: Oxford University Press.
English taste in landscape in the seventeenth century.H. V. S. Ogden - 1955 - Ann Arbor,: University of Michigan Press. Edited by Margaret Sinclair Ogden.
Landscape ethics: A moral commitment to responsible regional management.Albert Cortina - 2011 - Ramon Llull Journal of Applied Ethics 2 (2):163.
The South as Tragic Landscape.Louis A. Ruprecht - 2006 - Thesis Eleven 85 (1):37-63.

Analytics

Added to PP
2013-11-23

Downloads
17 (#868,559)

6 months
3 (#976,504)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?