1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910709840803321

Titolo

Ambulatory care: France, Federal Republic of Germany, and United States, 1981-83

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Hyattsville, Maryland : , : U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Centers for Disease Control, National Center for Health Statistics, , 1989

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (vii, 78 pages) : illustrations

Collana

Vital and health statistics. Series 5, Comparative international vital and health statistics report ; ; no. 5

DHHS publication ; ; no. (PHS) 89-1481

Disciplina

362.1/2/0973021

Soggetti

Ambulatory medical care - United States

Ambulatory medical care - France

Ambulatory medical care - Germany (West)

Ambulatory medical care

Statistics.

France

Germany (West)

United States

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

"June 1989."

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (page 31).



2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910955733403321

Titolo

Paris school semiotics . I Theory / / edited by Paul Perron & Frank Collins

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam, : J. Benjamins Pub. Co., 1989

ISBN

1-283-42458-4

9786613424587

90-272-7838-5

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (283 p.)

Collana

Semiotic crossroads ; ; v. 2

Altri autori (Persone)

PerronPaul

CollinsFrank

Disciplina

001.51/0944

001.510944

Soggetti

Semiotics - France

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references.

Nota di contenuto

PARIS SCHOOL SEMIOTICS I. THEORY; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Table of Contents; Introduction; Interfaces: The Care for a Project; Some Thoughts on this Intellectual Fare; Aspects of a Theory in Progress; NOTES; REFERENCES; I. Narrative Grammar, Actions and Passions; Greimas's Narrative Grammar; I. AT THE FUNDAMENTAL GRAMMAR LEVEL: THE FIRST STAGE OF ""NARRATIVIZATION""; Discussion; II. FROM THE FUNDAMENTAL GRAMMAR TO THE SURFACE NARRATIVE GRAMMAR: THE NARRATIVE UTTERANCE; Discussion; III. FROM THE NARRATIVE UTTERANCE TO THE NARRATIVE UNIT: ""PERFORMANCE""; Discussion

IV. THE LAST STAGE: THE PERFORMANCE SERIESDiscussion; NOTES; Prolegomenato a Theory of Action; I. INTRODUCTORY REMARKS; II. THE NARRATIVE PROGRAM AS MODEL OF REFERENCE FOR A THEORY OF THE FORMS OF ACTION; III. TOWARDS A RESTRICTED THEORY OF SIMPLE FORMS OF ACTION AND INTERACTION; IV. FROM THE ACTANTIAL LEVEL TO THE ACTORIAL LEVEL; NOTES; Toward an Anthropomorphic Narrative Topos; I. WHY THREE DIMENSIONS FOR NARRATIVE?; I.1. Empirical Reasons; I.2. Empirical reasons alone are not enough; I.3. Some Applications and Some Developments; II. DEVELOPING AN



ANTHROPOMORPHIC NARRATIVE TOPOS

II.1. The Combinatory PrincipleII.2. Typology and Syntax; II.3. Overall Syntax of the thematico-narrative topos; III. APPLICATIONS; III.1. The Linguistic Manifest of the three dimensions; III.2. The Story of the Man who Set out to Learn about Fear; III.3. Aldo's Conversions in the ""Rivage des Syrtes""; IV. CONCLUSION; NOTES; II. Toward Discourse; Pragmatics and Semiotics Epistemological Observations; Pragmatics and Semiotics Some Semiotic Conditions of Interaction; NOTES; Narrativity and Discursivity Points of Reference and Problematics; I. INTRODUCTION; II. FUNDAMENTAL POSTULATES

II.1. The Principle of ImmanenceII.2. The Generative Process; II.3. The Structural Postulate; II.4. Narrative Transformation; III. NARRATTVITY RESTRICTED TO THE NARRATIVE; III.1. The Narrative Utterance; III.2. The Narrative Program; III.3.The Narrative Schema; IV. NARRATIVE EXTENDED TO DISCOURSE IN GENERAL; IV.1. The Development of Modal Structures; IV.2. The Importance of the Cognitive Dimension; IV.3. The Question of the Subject; V. SETTING INTO DISCOURSE: ENUNCIATION; V.1. The Enunciative Conception of Meaning; V.2. The Enunciative Operations; V.3. Enunciation in Semiotics

V.3.1. Setting into Discourse within the Generative TrajectoryV.3.2. The ""Narrativization of Enunciation""; V.3.3. Figurativization; VI. CONCLUSION; NOTES; Prolegomenato Modal Analysis The Enunciating Subject; I. PREDICATION; II. META-WANTING; III. THE FUNCTION OF RECOGNITION; NOTES; The Esthetic Gaze; I. FROM THE MAGNIFICENT VIEW TO THE SINGULAR IMAGE; The Reference Text; A Magnificent View; Two Verbalizations of the |Plain|; Objectivizing vs. Subjectivizing Seeing; The Conditions of Veridictory Judgment; The Denegation of Social Discourse and the Assertion of Individual Discourse

The Singular Image

Sommario/riassunto

It has often been claimed that the aim of semiotics is to establish a general theory of systems of signification. However, as Jean-Claude Coquet notes in a recent collection of essays, what distinguishes one school of semiotics from another is the initial definition given of sign. If, for certain semioticians, the sign is first of all an observable phenomenon, for the Paris School it is first of all a construct and this point of departure has crucial theoretical and practical consequences. The essays appearing in these two volumes are representative of recent work carried out by members of thi