How language quietly controls the way you see cult

How language quietly controls the way you see culture
Structuralism argues that culture isn’t a collection of isolated works — it’s a system, like a language, where meaning comes from relationships and differences. This video explains how Saussure’s ideas about signs, langue, and parole shaped a new way of reading everything from genre fiction to myths and magazine covers. We explore “low structuralism” and the hunt for a storytelling grammar, and “high structuralism” and the cultural codes that decide what an image or scene signifies. Once you understand these hidden structures, you stop asking what a text means “by itself.” You start asking what unseen rules are making it mean that at all.


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