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2017 | 26/2 | 51-60

Article title

A Survey on the Semantic Field of ‘Vagabond’

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Content

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EN

Abstracts

How we perceive a certain concept is grounded in the ‘language game’: the values, prejudices, dispositions, and cultural baggage among its interpretive communities. In other words, there is no ‘true meaning’ inherent in a word per se; rather the meaning is derived out of what Derrida (1993) calls the ‘chain’ of signifi cation: the context, history, contingency, and often semantic contradictions that render a word polysemic. Taking off from here, this paper seeks to unpack the social ‘constructivism’ immanent in the a priori assumptions that cloak the idea of the ‘vagabond’. While invoking the contingency in the genesis and semantic history of ‘vagabond’ as a case study, this paper illustrates how meanings of certain heuristic concepts – in this case, ‘vagabond’, without a fixed referent – are often (re)configured, not because of reasons entirely linguistic, but rather due to changes in the prevailing epistemic paradigms.

Contributors

author
  • National Institute of Technology, Silchar

References

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Document Type

Publication order reference

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YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-27745e7d-d7db-4d7c-b594-9d83401f46c5
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