Glossary entry (derived from question below)
German term or phrase:
Wort-Bild-Schere
English translation:
word-image gap
Added to glossary by
William Stein
May 27, 2002 12:15
22 yrs ago
1 viewer *
German term
Wort-Bild-Schere
German to English
Other
Media / Multimedia
Media
Hi,
I am currently translating a market study and the people being interviewed got to see a few commercials.
My sentence is "Vor allem verwirrt die Wort-Bild-Schere,..."
I cannot find "Wort-Bild-Schere" anywhere, I know what it means, but I don't know the correct translation for it.
Any ideas? Could you also quote your source? Thanks a lot, Patricia
I am currently translating a market study and the people being interviewed got to see a few commercials.
My sentence is "Vor allem verwirrt die Wort-Bild-Schere,..."
I cannot find "Wort-Bild-Schere" anywhere, I know what it means, but I don't know the correct translation for it.
Any ideas? Could you also quote your source? Thanks a lot, Patricia
Proposed translations
(English)
4 +2 | word-image gap | William Stein |
4 +1 | divergence between text and pictures (or discrepancy) | Dr. Fred Thomson |
4 +1 | Word-image dichotomy! | brute (X) |
4 | conflict between words and images | Deborah Shannon |
Proposed translations
+2
36 mins
Selected
word-image gap
Here's a semiotics text that speaks of the gap or interval between images and words in the media:
Word and Image:
the Interval, Precession and Reciprocal Transgression
Pietro Montani
University of Rome "La Sapienza"
The hypothesis that I would like to discuss is as follows: whether the relationship between image and language, in all of its forms, should be considered the result of relations between two systems or if it would not be more advantageous and appropriate - for the very reason of better understanding the effects of discourse - to concentrate one's attention on the relationship itself, on its origins and its conditions.
Let me clarify my point, to avoid seeming to have opened with some sort of tautology. I would like to suggest that in order to adequately understand the phenomenon of interference between image and language (for example, audio-visual media) it might be useful and even advantageous to consider the relationship itself as something more original than its component parts.
This is what I mean when I speak of "interval". There is an intermediate space, leftover between word and image, a gap that belongs neither to the verbal nor the iconic although of necessity having a bit of each
http://www.hum.au.dk/semiotics/docs/epub/urb97/Montani.htm
Word and Image:
the Interval, Precession and Reciprocal Transgression
Pietro Montani
University of Rome "La Sapienza"
The hypothesis that I would like to discuss is as follows: whether the relationship between image and language, in all of its forms, should be considered the result of relations between two systems or if it would not be more advantageous and appropriate - for the very reason of better understanding the effects of discourse - to concentrate one's attention on the relationship itself, on its origins and its conditions.
Let me clarify my point, to avoid seeming to have opened with some sort of tautology. I would like to suggest that in order to adequately understand the phenomenon of interference between image and language (for example, audio-visual media) it might be useful and even advantageous to consider the relationship itself as something more original than its component parts.
This is what I mean when I speak of "interval". There is an intermediate space, leftover between word and image, a gap that belongs neither to the verbal nor the iconic although of necessity having a bit of each
http://www.hum.au.dk/semiotics/docs/epub/urb97/Montani.htm
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Thanks a lot to all of you!"
+1
6 mins
divergence between text and pictures (or discrepancy)
Hamblock/ Wessels provided "divergence."
36 mins
conflict between words and images
I also think 'discrepancy' would be fine, as has already been suggested. This is used in the first source cited, an academic paper on words and images.
So these are just a couple more suggestions to play with. The second source uses 'conflict' in the media studies context.
I am also reminded of the phrase "(conveying) mixed messages" describing the ambiguity arising when body language contradicts verbal communication, though this would not necessarily work in your context.
So these are just a couple more suggestions to play with. The second source uses 'conflict' in the media studies context.
I am also reminded of the phrase "(conveying) mixed messages" describing the ambiguity arising when body language contradicts verbal communication, though this would not necessarily work in your context.
Reference:
www.medienpaed.com/00-2/noeth1.pdf
http://www.lanl.gov/worldview/news/releases/archive/99-109.shtml
+1
1 hr
Word-image dichotomy!
"Foremostly confounds the word - image dichotomy ..."
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Note added at 2002-05-27 14:51:17 (GMT)
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better: \"Confounds most of all the word-image dichotomy ...\"
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Note added at 2002-05-27 16:44:02 (GMT)
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or rather: \"Confounds most of all, the voice - image dichotomy ...\"
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Note added at 2002-05-27 14:51:17 (GMT)
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better: \"Confounds most of all the word-image dichotomy ...\"
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Note added at 2002-05-27 16:44:02 (GMT)
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or rather: \"Confounds most of all, the voice - image dichotomy ...\"
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Jeannie Graham
25 mins
|
Thanx, kalimeh!
|
|
neutral |
Kim Metzger
: The verb follows the subject in English. Never heard of foremostly.
1 hr
|
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