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Articles

Semantic macro-structures and macro-rules in visual discourse processing

 

Abstract

Semantic macrostructures, although strangely ignored or ruled outside most formal linguistics and even some methods of discourse analysis, define the general, overall meanings of discourse, informally called ‘topic,’ ‘theme,’ ‘gist,’ or ‘upshot’ and on the basis of the higher levels of the mental models of the social actors. Macro-structural (topical, crucial) information, according to Teun van Dijk, plays a fundamental role in discourse comprehension and recall― although other factors (such as remarkableness, vividness, etc.) may also affect attention, prominent representation, and hence recall. One can summarise a sequence of pictures by a title, like a summary of a movie. Similarly, a trailer serves to summarise the movie and to indicate what makes it different from other movies on the cinema circuit. But can we summarise a sequence of images by another (‘macro’) image or image-topic? This article discusses semantic macro-structures and processes of multimodal discourse comprehension, formulating the mapping rules underlying the global interpretation of political cartoons. The rules for multimodal discourse processing (involving group-specific knowledge) formulated in this study apply to Arabic-speaking audiences, which should be of interest for scholars in intercultural communication and cognition.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes

[1] The theoretical framework on macrostructures and their application in discourse analysis is largely based on van Dijk’s work, unless otherwise cited.

[2] Visit, e.g., https://www.facebook.com/Anas-El-Deeb-ART-436796402998453/ (last accessed 29 March 2019), or https://www.facebook.com/faraghassanart/ (last accessed 11 April 2019).

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by Bremen University.

Notes on contributors

Ahmed Abdel-Raheem

Ahmed Abdel-Raheem is a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany. Before joining the University of Bremen, he held lectureship and research positions at Umm al- Qura University in Mecca, Saudi Arabia (2012-2013) and Marie Curie-Sklodowska University in Lublin, Poland (2017-2019). He is the author of Pictorial Framing in Moral Politics: A Corpus-based Experimental Study (Routledge, 2019), and has published internationally in a number of journals, such as Discourse and Society, Metaphor and the Social World, Visual Communication Quarterly, Graphic Novels and Comics, Cognitive Linguistic Studies, Information Design Journal, Multimodal Communication, Social Semiotics, Pragmatics and Cognition, Cultural Cognitive Science, Journal of Pragmatics, and Intercultural Pragmatics.

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