The Semiotics of Movement in Space explores how people move through buildings and interact with objects in space. Focusing on visitors to the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney, McMurtrie analyses and interprets movement and space relations to highlight new developments and applications of spatial semiotics as he proposes that people’s movement options have the potential to transform the meaning of a particular space. He illustrates people’s interaction with microcamera footage of people’s movement through the museum from a first-person point of view, thereby providing an alternative, complementary perspective on how buildings are actually used. The book offers effective tools for practitioners to analyse people’s actual and potential movement patterns to rethink spatial design options from a semiotic perspective. The applicability of the semiotic principles developed in this book is demonstrated by examining movement options in a restaurant and a café, with the hope that the principles can be developed and applied to other sites of displays such as shopping centres and transportation hubs. This book should appeal to scholars of visual communication, semiotics, multimodal discourse analysis and visitor studies.
Robert James McMurtrie is a PhD from the University of New South Wales, Australia, in Multimodality and Spatiogrammatics.
1. Paving the Way: Theories, terms and texts2. Modelling Movement in Space as a Semogenic System: The discourse-semantic and expression strata3. Modelling Movement in Space as a Semogenic System: The hodogrammatical stratum4. Framing and Reframing Exhibition Space: Viewing stations, isoglosses and facial orientation5. Points of Departure and Connection: Theme, spatiotaxis and intersemiotic connection6. Transforming Space into Place: Rhythm and occupation value7. Interacting in Exhibition Space: (Dis)aligning with the semiotic designer8. Negotiation the Authorial Voice: Spatial engagement and graduation9. Repressing and Experiencing Perceptual Structures: Assigning participatory rules10. Exploratory Exhibition SpaceS: A child’s perspective11. Movement in Restaurants and Cafés: Sites of performance and display12. Retracing our Steps and Moving Forward
Christian Mosbæk Johannessen, Theo van Leeuwen, Denmark) Mosb?k Johannessen, Christian (University of Southern Denmark, Denmark) van Leeuwen, Theo (University of Southern Denmark, Theo Van Leeuwen
Maria Grazia Sindoni, Janina Wildfeuer, Kay O'Halloran, Italy) Sindoni, Maria Grazia (University of Messina, Germany) Wildfeuer, Janina (University of Bremen, Western Australia) O'Halloran, Kay (Curtin University, Perth