Abstract
Museums are multimodal environments where semiotic resources including objects, space,
sound, light, movement, language and the body converge. Our case study of a Taiwanese
ceramics exhibition draws on the concept of ‘affective affordances’, meaning the socially
and contextually informed ways that semiotic resources invite felt and embodied responses.
We use this concept to investigate the ways in which texts and space co-construct affective
meanings. We discuss texts and space as physical entities within the affective exhibition,
each possessing intrinsic properties which can potentially stimulate certain embodied
responses from visitors. Specifically, the case study addresses two questions: (1) how
written texts within an exhibition interact with space to afford affective meaning potential;
and (2) how museum visitors as active participants respond to space and text as affective
stimuli. The study adopts a novel composite theoretical framework that combines spatial
discourse analysis using the Binding framework, linguistic analysis using the Appraisal
framework, and walking interviews. Our analysis provides rich empirical evidence of how
space and written texts interact to create a felt sense of place for visitors.
sound, light, movement, language and the body converge. Our case study of a Taiwanese
ceramics exhibition draws on the concept of ‘affective affordances’, meaning the socially
and contextually informed ways that semiotic resources invite felt and embodied responses.
We use this concept to investigate the ways in which texts and space co-construct affective
meanings. We discuss texts and space as physical entities within the affective exhibition,
each possessing intrinsic properties which can potentially stimulate certain embodied
responses from visitors. Specifically, the case study addresses two questions: (1) how
written texts within an exhibition interact with space to afford affective meaning potential;
and (2) how museum visitors as active participants respond to space and text as affective
stimuli. The study adopts a novel composite theoretical framework that combines spatial
discourse analysis using the Binding framework, linguistic analysis using the Appraisal
framework, and walking interviews. Our analysis provides rich empirical evidence of how
space and written texts interact to create a felt sense of place for visitors.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Multimodality and Society |
Early online date | 2 Aug 2024 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 2 Aug 2024 |
Keywords
- affect
- affordance theory
- appraisal
- Binding
- Museum studies
- museum translation