Abstract Proceedings of IESMDT - 2021
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DISSOCIATION IS USED TO REIMAGININGMULTIMODAL RELATIONSHIPS
We are in the midst of a "pictorial turn," according to W.J.T. Mitchell, and images are becoming a more significant part of digital and multimodal communication. In my dissertation, I explore how multimodal arguments that include texts and visuals might create meaning. Visual rhetoricians have frequently used text-based rhetorical principles or brand-new image-based theories to prioritize one medium over the other in an effort to explain text-image debates. I contend that The New Rhetoric's concept of dissociation—which was created by Chaim Perelman and LucieOlbrechts-Tyteca to illustrate how the mingling of concepts with disparate values can create new meaning—can help us better understand the relationship between the two media. My dissertation broadens the scope of dissociation by applying it specifically to visual contexts and using it to critique visual arguments in a number of historical periods where political, religious, and economic factors cause one form of media to be valued over the other: Byzantine iconoclasm, the late medieval era, the 1950s advertising boom, and the contemporary digital age. I contend that dissociation in each of these eras demonstrates how the favored media can influence a multimodal argument entirely. In order to adapt dissociation to the multimodal composition classroom, I will end with a discussion of dissociative multimodal pedagogy.
Dissociative, Multimodal, Prioritize
17/09/2021
149
IESMDT147
IMPORTANT DAYS
Paper Submission Last Date
October 20th, 2024
Notification of Acceptance
November 7th, 2024
Camera Ready Paper Submission & Author's Registration
November 1st, 2024
Date of Conference
November 15th, 2024
Publication
January 30th, 2025