749:
1649:. The "face" in faciality is a system that "brings together a despotic wall of interconnected signifiers and passional black holes of subjective absorption". Black holes, fixed on white walls which antagonized flows bounce off of, are the active destruction, or deterritorialization, of signs. What makes the power exerted by the face of a subject possible is that, creating an intense initial confusion of meaning, it continues to signify through its persistent
104:
720:
even though we may never have heard them before." Moreover, while words are the most familiar form signs take, they stand for many things within life, such as advertisement, objects, body language, music, and so on. Therefore, the use of signs, and the two components that make up a sign, can be and are—whether consciously or not—applied to everyday life.
36:
2324:, possessing a gravitational pull that has the power to massively reshape and remotivate ... the semiotic black hole... little or no trace of its influence. ... a collision of a fatal event and a perfect object ... Temporality is constant motion; to mark a point in time is to freeze only that moment, to celebrate impression and deny expression.
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2064:
abstracted. ... The signified constantly reimparts signifier, recharges it or produces more of it. The form always comes from the signifier. The ultimate signified is therefore the signifier itself, in its redundancy or 'excess.' ... communication and interpretation are what always serve to reproduce and produce signifier.
716:
between the two components that make up the sign are agreed upon. Saussure argued that the meaning of a sign "depends on its relation to other words within the system;" for example, to understand an individual word such as "tree," one must also understand the word "bush" and how the two relate to each other.
2388:
to the present is that passage, the passage from potentiality to instantaneity. If in the former blankness was not a sign, but rather the place for the sign, in the latter it has become signally characteristic of the surface of all the signs which exclude it with recognizability and narrative...ying
1657:
Significance is never without a white wall upon which it inscribes its signs and redundancies. Subjectification is never without a black hole in which it lodges its consciousness, passion, and redundancies. Since all semiotics are mixed and strata come at least in twos, it should come as no surprise
719:
It is this difference from other signs that allows the possibility of a speech community. However, we need to remember that signifiers and their significance change all the time, becoming "dated." It is in this way that we are all "practicing semioticians who pay a great deal of attention to signs …
1678:
as well as their philosophical predecessors in general is that, beyond a resolution with the oppressive forces of faciality and the dominance of the face, Deleuze and
Guattari reproach the preservation of the face as a system of a tight regulation of signifiers and destruction of signs, declaring
2063:
It is this amorphous continuum that for the moment plays the role of the 'signified,' but it continually glides beneath the signifier, for which it serves only as a medium or wall; the specific forms of all contents dissolve in it. The atmospherization or mundanization of contents. Contents are
715:
In order to understand how the signifier and signified relate to each other, one must be able to interpret signs. "The only reason that the signifier does entail the signified is because there is a conventional relationship at play." That is, a sign can only be understood when the relationship
1487:
Originating in an idea from LĂ©vi-Strauss, the concept of floating signifiers, or empty signifiers, has since been repurposed in
Lacanian theory as the concept of signifiers that are not linked to tangible things by any specific reference for them, and are "floating" or "empty" because of this
711:
as the conceptual ideal form. In other words, "contemporary commentators tend to describe the signifier as the form that the sign takes and the signified as the concept to which it refers." The relationship between the signifier and signified is an arbitrary relationship: "there is no logical
2220:
Metaphors in analysis are woven into narratives, which offer a creative domain for playful interaction and allow multiple strands of life to be interwoven. Psychoanalyst Arnold Modell (1997) argues that linguists, neurobiologists, and psychoanalysts can share a common paradigm through
1945:
The
Lacanian subject is 'strung along' by the unfolding of the chain of signifiers; its very being is conditioned by the organization of a linguistic code. ... For Lacan, the unconscious is 'the discourse of the Other.' Human desire is 'the desire of the
712:
connection" between them. This differs from a symbol, which is "never wholly arbitrary." The idea that both the signifier and the signified are inseparable is explained by
Saussure's diagram, which shows how both components coincide to create the sign.
2096:
use the bar to express the double nature of repression: it is a barrier that separates the systems, and a relating that ties together the relations of signifier to signified...Metaphor is nothing other than repression, and vice
1416:
presented formulas for the ideas of the signified and the signifier in his texts and seminars, specifically repurposing Freud's ideas to describe the roles that the signified and the signifier serve as follows:
1268:
670:—literal or explicit meanings of words. Without Saussure's breakdown of signs into signified and signifier, however, these semioticians would not have had anything to base their concepts on.
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While both
Saussure and Peirce contributed greatly to the concept of signs, it is important to note that each differed in their approach to the study. It was Saussure who created the terms
638:
Succeeding these founders were numerous philosophers and linguists who defined themselves as semioticians. These semioticians have each brought their own concerns to the study of signs.
642:(1976), a distinguished Italian semiotician, came to the conclusion that "if signs can be used to tell the truth, they can also be used to lie." Postmodernist social theorist
54:
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2027:, for instance, is a vast metaphor possessing a single signified; to sum it up means to reveal the signified, an operation so drastic that it causes the
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1437:' of signifiers is analogous to the 'rings of a necklace that is a ring in another necklace made of rings' 'The signifier is that which represents a
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2384:...predicated on the idea of the surface—the plane and the point—as opposed to the form—the shape and its interior. ... The passage from Victorian
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in order to break down what a sign was. He diverged from the previous studies on language as he focused on the present in relation to the act of
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Ricoeur, Paul (1970). "Book III: Dialectic: A Philosophical
Interpretation of Freud: 1. Epistemology: Between Psychology and Phenomenology:
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which is the "plane of expression" or the observable aspects of the sign itself. The idea was first proposed in the work of Swiss linguist
1645:, they developed the idea of "faciality" to refer to the interplay of signifiers in the process of subjectification and the production of
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What distinguishes this radical use and systemization of the signified and the signifier as interplaying in subjectivity from Lacan and
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is often interpreted as the conceptual material form, i.e. something which can be seen, heard, touched, smelled or tasted; and the
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616:(an 'interpreter of signs'). It was not until the early part of the 20th century, however, that Saussure and American philosopher
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Morris, Humphrey (1980). "The Need to
Connect: Representations of Freud's Psychical Apparatus". In Smith, Joseph H. (ed.).
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The connection between 'place' and 'metaphor' is evident. Paul Ricœur remarks that 'as figure, metaphor constitutes a
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that "if human beings have a destiny, it is rather to escape the face, to dismantle the face and facializations".
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2405:. Capitalism and Schizophrenia. Translated by Massumi, Brian. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 167, 171.
2298:"When Signifiers Collide: Doubling, Semiotic Black Holes, and the Destructive Remainder of the American Un/Real"
2051:. Capitalism and Schizophrenia. Translated by Massumi, Brian. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 112, 114.
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The concept of signs has been around for a long time, having been studied by many classic philosophers such as
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1880:. Psychiatry and the Humanities. Vol. 6. Yale University Press. pp. 54, 168, 173, 199, 202, 219.
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that a very special mechanism is situated at their intersection. Oddly enough, it is a face: the
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The semiotic black hole is...the destruction of the whole sign...that radically transforms the
2237:. Semiotext(e) Foreign Agents Series. Translated by Adkins, Taylor. Semiotext(e). p. 338.
2154:"Representations of the Desert in Silko's 'Ceremony' and Al-Koni's 'The Bleeding of the Stone'"
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A Literary
Semiotics Approach to the Semantic Universe of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four
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Deleuze, Gilles; Guattari, FĂ©lix (1987). "587 B.C.-A.D. 70: On
Several Regimes of Signs".
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692:('concept'). For Saussure, the signified and signifier are purely psychological: they are
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and an extension of the meaning of words; its explanation is grounded in the theory of
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is but secondary in relation to the gazeless eyes, to the black hole of faciality. The
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Visual
Communication Design: An Introduction to Design Concepts in Everyday Experience
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made radical uses of the ideas of the signified and the signifier following Lacan. In
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2113:. Psychiatry and the Humanities. Vol. 4. Yale University Press. p. 312.
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is what the sign represents or refers to, known as the "plane of content", and
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Paul Ricoeur hus, the signified is untranslatable...From 'Signe et Sens,'
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that what psychoanalysts call transference is another name for metaphor.
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For Lacan, there are no signifieds in the unconscious, only signifiers.
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2012:
1988:
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Cambray, Joseph; Carter, Linda (2004). "Analytic methods revisited".
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are synonyms, both meaning to transfer, to carry over or beyond, and
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Analytical Psychology: Contemporary Perspectives in Jungian Analysis
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he multitude of 'floating signifiers' is structured into a unified
2353:
2084:. Translated by Savage, Denis. Yale University Press. p. 402.
2004:
1518:
sliding of its signified it is a signifier without the signified'.
1510:) which 'quilts' them the 'rigid designator', which totalizes an
2082:
Terry Lectures: Freud & Philosophy: An Essay on Interpretation
1711:. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 11.
1434:
585:
102:
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Deleuze, Gilles; Guattari, FĂ©lix (1987). "Year Zero: Faciality".
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through the intervention of a certain 'nodal point' (Lacanian
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The Literary Freud: Mechanisms of Defense and the Poetic Will
1670:
is but secondary in relation to the white wall of faciality.
2164:(The Desert: Human Geography and Symbolic Economy): 36–62.
650:, referring to a copy becoming more real than reality, the
1989:"An Introduction to the Structural Analysis of Narrative"
113:
illustrating the relationship between signified (French:
2208:. Advancing Theory in Therapy. Routledge. p. 139.
50:
1846:
1844:
684:, divides the sign into two distinct components: the
1905:. Oneworld Beginner’s Guides. Oneworld. p. 48.
1901:
Bailly, Lionel (2020). "Real, Symbolic, Imaginary".
1958:Žižek, Slavoj (1989). "Part II: Lack in the Other;
45:
may be too technical for most readers to understand
2235:The Machinic Unconscious: Essays in Schizoanalysis
1876:Smith, Joseph H.; Kerrigan, William, eds. (1983).
2389:outside of art it would have to be art's subject.
2380:The face signifies by refusing to signify. ...
1931:Freud as Philosopher: metapsychology after Lacan
96:"Signified" redirects here. For other uses, see
1655:
1500:
1419:
1135:The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis
1768:. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 135.
2152:Fouad, Jehan Farouk; Alwakeel, Saeed (2013).
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1277:International Psychoanalytical Association
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1582:barrier (between the-chain-of-signifiers
666:—cultural meanings attached to words—and
73:Learn how and when to remove this message
57:, without removing the technical details.
1987:Barthes, Roland; Duisit, Lionel (1975).
1791:Media Analysis Techniques, Third Edition
1555:For broader coverage of this topic, see
1470:For broader coverage of this topic, see
1391:For broader coverage of this topic, see
674:Relation between signifier and signified
576:, one of the two founders of semiotics.
2273:Deleuze on Music, Painting and the Arts
1793:. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE. p. 14.
1699:
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620:brought the term into more common use.
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1862:Cobley, Paul and Litza, Jansz. 1997.
1764:Davis, Meredith; Hunt, Jamer (2017).
662:used signs to explain the concept of
107:A generic diagram from de Saussure's
55:make it understandable to non-experts
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2158:Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics
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1271:Psychoanalytic Training and Research
1061:The Psychopathology of Everyday Life
2078:Psychoanalysis is not Phenomenology
1751:. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications.
1282:World Association of Psychoanalysis
560:) are the two main components of a
1866:, Maryland: National Bookworm Inc.
770:Psychosocial development (Erikson)
25:
1816:. 2013. "Semiotics and Society."
1287:List of schools of psychoanalysis
654:becoming more important than the
1637:, extending from their ideas of
1336:
1263:British Psychoanalytical Society
1115:Civilization and Its Discontents
747:
34:
2136:pointed out a long time ago in
724:Depth psychology and philosophy
2437:Ferdinand de Saussure (1959).
2336:Gilbert-Rolfe, Jeremy (1997).
1964:The Sublime Object of Ideology
1933:. Routledge. pp. 13, 14.
1495:The Sublime Object of Ideology
1269:Columbia University Center for
1258:British Psychoanalytic Council
1155:The Sublime Object of Ideology
1125:The Mass Psychology of Fascism
1:
2439:Course in General Linguistics
1483:Parallax § As a metaphor
1095:Beyond the Pleasure Principle
1085:Psychology of the Unconscious
681:Course in General Linguistics
110:Course in General Linguistics
1051:The Interpretation of Dreams
608:derives from the Greek root
474:Tartu–Moscow Semiotic School
2296:Morrione, Deems D. (2006).
1966:. Verso. pp. 95, 109.
1789:Berger, Arthur Asa (2005).
2488:
2338:"Blankness as a Signifier"
2138:The Philosophy of Rhetoric
1707:KalelioÄźlu, Murat (2018).
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2275:. Routledge. p. 90.
2233:Guattari, FĂ©lix (2011) .
1929:Boothby, Richard (2001).
1903:Lacan: A Beginner's Guide
1749:Media Analysis Techniques
1476:Private language argument
1449:) for another signifier'.
1433:') and the signified a '
1250:Boston Graduate School of
604:, among others. The term
223:Semiotic theory of Peirce
2441:. New York: McGraw-Hill.
2251:Encyclopedia Universalis
1425:between Signifiers (the
1421:There is a 'barrier' of
765:Psychosexual development
688:('sound-image') and the
85:Not to be confused with
469:Copenhagen–Tartu school
353:Algirdas Julien Greimas
261:Computational semiotics
27:Concepts in linguistics
18:Signifier and signified
2271:Bogue, Ronald (2003).
1850:Chandler, 2002, p. 18.
1838:. New York: Routledge.
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1551:Fallacy of composition
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1397:Principles of grouping
678:Saussure, in his 1916
618:Charles Sanders Peirce
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2472:Ferdinand de Saussure
1864:Introducing Semiotics
1836:Semiotics: The Basics
1660:white wall/black hole
1343:Psychology portal
1322:Psychoanalytic theory
658:. French semiotician
574:Ferdinand de Saussure
423:Ferdinand de Saussure
297:Paradigmatic analysis
106:
2190:The Rule of Metaphor
1993:New Literary History
1643:reterritorialization
1639:deterritorialization
1429:: 'discourse of the
1307:Child psychoanalysis
795:Id, ego and superego
733:a series of articles
453:Victoria, Lady Welby
302:Syntagmatic analysis
271:Semiotics of culture
2452:Signifier/Signified
2403:A Thousand Plateaus
2049:A Thousand Plateaus
1634:A Thousand Plateaus
1619:In their theory of
1561:Schema (psychology)
1547:Fallacy of division
830:Countertransference
433:Michael Silverstein
256:Cognitive semiotics
91:Sense and reference
2192:3; italics added).
1878:Interpreting Lacan
1814:Berger, Arthur Asa
1745:Berger, Arthur Asa
1466:Floating signifier
1460:Floating signifier
1454:Lacan, paraphrased
1172:Schools of thought
1105:The Ego and the Id
484:Post-structuralism
266:Literary semiotics
158:relational complex
123:
2412:978-1-85168-637-7
2302:Cultural Critique
2282:978-0-415-96608-5
2244:978-1-58435-088-0
2215:978-1-58391-999-6
2091:978-0-300-02189-9
2058:978-1-85168-637-7
1973:978-1-84467-300-1
1912:978-1-85168-637-7
1887:978-0-300-13581-7
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790:Psychic apparatus
598:William of Ockham
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2173:. Retrieved
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2016:. Retrieved
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1596:transference
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1507:
1501:
1498:as follows:
1493:
1490:Slavoj Žižek
1488:separation.
1486:
1420:
1412:
1153:
1145:Anti-Oedipus
1143:
1133:
1123:
1113:
1103:
1093:
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1074:of Sexuality
1070:
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915:Freud (Anna)
825:Transference
810:Introjection
800:Ego defenses
780:Preconscious
718:
714:
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696:rather than
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413:John Poinsot
343:Paolo Fabbri
310:Semioticians
251:Biosemiotics
227:
186: /
177: /
118:
114:
108:
69:
60:
44:
2130:metapherein
1409:Lacanianism
1403:Lacanianism
775:Unconscious
703:Today, the
664:connotation
640:Umberto Eco
614:semeiotikos
393:Juri Lotman
388:Kalevi Kull
363:Stuart Hall
338:Umberto Eco
218:Semiosphere
175:Connotation
2461:Categories
2375:2022-03-18
2315:2022-03-18
2175:2022-02-20
2126:Ăśbertragen
2018:2022-01-18
1800:1412906830
1695:References
1689:Signifyin'
1651:refusal to
1592:repression
1541:See also:
1481:See also:
1423:repression
1224:Relational
835:Resistance
805:Projection
668:denotation
557:signifiant
333:John Deely
179:Denotation
119:signifiant
2467:Semiotics
2370:161209057
2221:metaphor.
1653:signify.
1580:disclosed
1578:is ; the
1576:signified
1569:Intuition
1557:Narrative
1523:Signified
1516:metonymic
1447:construct
1025:Winnicott
1005:Spielrein
985:Laplanche
905:Fairbairn
845:Dreamwork
709:signified
705:signifier
698:substance
690:signified
686:signifier
656:signified
652:signifier
646:spoke of
629:signified
625:signifier
606:semiotics
594:Augustine
590:Aristotle
570:signifier
566:signified
542:signifier
538:signified
534:semiotics
129:Semiotics
2170:24487181
2029:identity
1960:Che Vuoi
1834:. 2017.
1747:. 2012.
1683:See also
1601:through
1588:metaphor
1512:ideology
1452:—
1300:See also
1242:Training
1219:Reichian
1194:Lacanian
1179:Adlerian
1020:Sullivan
1015:Strachey
970:Kristeva
945:Jacobson
940:Irigaray
930:Guattari
910:Ferenczi
895:Chodorow
850:Cathexis
758:Concepts
731:Part of
612:, as in
564:, where
551:signifié
213:Semiosis
208:Salience
198:Modality
188:Decoding
184:Encoding
153:relation
115:signifié
87:Referent
2432:Sources
2362:1344162
2310:4489250
2253:, 1975.
2031:of the
1946:Other.'
1599:journey
1529:Essence
1443:fantasy
1439:subject
1209:Marxist
1189:Jungian
900:Erikson
870:Abraham
284:Methods
193:Lexical
98:Signify
49:Please
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1676:Sartre
1668:mirror
1567:, and
1549:, and
1535:, and
1159:(1989)
1149:(1972)
1139:(1964)
1129:(1933)
1119:(1930)
1109:(1923)
1099:(1920)
1089:(1912)
1078:(1905)
1065:(1901)
1055:(1899)
1010:Stekel
990:Mahler
935:Horney
890:Breuer
880:Balint
840:Denial
815:Libido
600:, and
546:French
243:Fields
229:Umwelt
135:
2366:S2CID
2358:JSTOR
2306:JSTOR
2166:JSTOR
2097:versa
2009:JSTOR
1603:place
1504:field
1435:chain
1431:Other
1030:Žižek
1000:Reich
980:Laing
975:Lacan
965:Klein
960:Kohut
950:Jones
925:Fromm
875:Adler
820:Drive
586:Plato
235:Value
2407:ISBN
2277:ISBN
2239:ISBN
2210:ISBN
2128:and
2115:ISBN
2086:ISBN
2053:ISBN
2033:poem
1968:ISBN
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1935:ISBN
1907:ISBN
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1664:gaze
1641:and
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1474:and
1472:Name
1395:and
1385:and
995:Rank
955:Jung
885:Bion
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610:seme
562:sign
554:and
540:and
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148:Sign
2350:doi
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