The semiotics metaphor in the epic of Al-Mishkat by Ahmed Bakheet, an applid study.

Document Type : Brief summaries of Dissertations.

Author

Aswan University, Faculty of Arts, Department of Arabic Language

Abstract

Recently, a number of modern curricula have emerged that have dominated the field of linguistic studies, and have become the preoccupation of many scholars, and among those curricula (the semiotic curriculum), which occupied a large part of the interest of modern studies; Linguistic and non-linguistic, it represented a strong bridge linking the different sciences, especially the sciences concerned with interpretation and methodological assumptions; As linguistic, philosophical, critical sciences, etc., and although its first establishment came in the seventeenth century AD, it specialized and emerged as an independent field at the end of the nineteenth century, and one of its most important founders was the linguist de Saussure, who looked at it with a linguistic view, and defined it as "" A science that studies the role of signs as part of social life", and called it (semiology), As for the metonymy, it is a graphic and aesthetic image that has a prominent role that cannot be overlooked or underestimated, whether on the ancient rhetorical aspect, or in modern semiotic studies. My relationship of juxtaposition and association, and there is no doubt that following the allegorical image in any linguistic text, especially the poetic text, requires looking at the text as an integrated linguistic and aesthetic structure that cannot be divided, so that the critic or the recipient can seek the semantic and aesthetic meaning of the metonymy in the text in general

Keywords

Main Subjects