Status Updates From The Semiotics of Emoji: The...
The Semiotics of Emoji: The Rise of Visual Language in the Age of the Internet (Bloomsbury Advances in Semiotics) by
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Jane Birch
is on page 117 of 208
This book is fairly easy to read and I found especially the first chapters very exiting. But it feels like this book is trying to be two things at once.
It's trying to sneak onto the shelf of popular-science books, that are written for a broad audience, and usually contains funny anecdotes to swallow the 'boring' science stuff a bit easier. It does not quite achieve it.
— Apr 02, 2020 02:05AM
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It's trying to sneak onto the shelf of popular-science books, that are written for a broad audience, and usually contains funny anecdotes to swallow the 'boring' science stuff a bit easier. It does not quite achieve it.
Joshua Ong
is on page 35 of 208
Have read the first three chapters.
— Feb 26, 2019 10:28AM
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Leina
is on page 114 of 208
“Tweeps (users of tweets)...”
Wow, I hadn’t realized I was back in some sad, alternate reality of 2009 where tweeps was ever a culturally relevant term...
— Dec 19, 2017 07:48PM
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Wow, I hadn’t realized I was back in some sad, alternate reality of 2009 where tweeps was ever a culturally relevant term...
Leina
is on page 68 of 208
This guy honestly does not understand emoji, let alone pop culture references which are made with emoji. Do not read.
— Dec 18, 2017 02:54PM
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Leina
is on page 5 of 208
Not off to a good start, let me tell you: “The shift from pictography to alphabetic writing around 1,000 BCE was designated by Marshall McLuhan (1962) as the first true cognitive paradigm shift in human history, marking the migration of humans from tribal societies to the first civilizations...” First of all, who? Second of all, when??? Third of all, WHAT??
— Dec 15, 2017 01:07PM
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