6533b872fe1ef96bd12d3aa4

RESEARCH PRODUCT

From ‘no dogs here!’ to ‘beware of the dog!’ : restricting dog signs as a reflection of social norms

Mia HalonenPetteri Laihonen

subject

warningsVisual Arts and Performing ArtsVisual interactionsosiosemiotiikka050109 social psychologyrestrictionsPublic space0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesvisual interactiondog signslinguistic landscapeLinguistic landscape060201 languages & linguisticsthreatsvaroituksetkilvet ja kyltitCommunication05 social sciencesvisuaalinen viestintäsocial semioticsSocial semioticsnormit0602 languages and literaturekiellotPsychologySocial psychologynorms

description

Signs in public space reflect ‘normalcy’ in a community. The authors ask what restricting signs tell us about a society? In order to explore the system and variation in the ways dog signs manifest different norms and control, they compare two different data sets: dog signs in a Northern European town, Jyväskylä in Finland, and two Eastern European villages in Romania. They apply a qualitative methodology based on visual communication, geosemiotics and linguistic landscape studies. The focus of the article is on the resources of addressing and the visual semiotics of the image. The investigated communities seem to create a complementary distribution of what they regulate that is also displayed through their semiotics: the Jyväskylä examples are prohibitions for dogs ‘being’ while the Romanian cases consist of warnings or threats. Both prohibitions and warnings implicate the norms and normalities in the communities, showing where they stand in terms of a continuum between a ‘dog as a pet’ and a ‘dog as a (co-)worker’. As images, the urban signs in Jyväskylä can be characterized as icons of a small collared pet, placed as a part of top-down communication in ‘tight’ public spaces. In contrast, the photographs of big dogs in the open and private Romanian village spaces refer to some specific guard dog, through which their owners communicate a benevolent warning or an intimidating threat.

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201911285044