This is an outdated version published on 2022-02-13. Read the most recent version.

Visual Images and Interpretations: A Semiotic Analysis of Textbook Covers

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/sjah.v4i1.43051

Keywords:

Textbooks, social semiotics, discourse analysis, gender, culture

Abstract

This article presents a comparative visual interpretation of the cover images of the selected textbooks. A social semiotic approach was used to analyse various compositional and thematic differences among two sets of textbook covers. The compositional interpretation was applied to explore the differences and similarities in an image composition and discourse analysis was used to explore their implied social discourses. The findings show some significant shift as well as continuum in the image composition and underlined social discourses. For example, the newly published textbooks focus on settings, character details and character connection, and use various colours in contrast to the old textbook covers. More activities promoting gender equality were found in the new textbook covers than in the old textbook covers. Overall, the new textbooks propose positive changes in their cover image composition in quality and gender discourses. However, the images only feature-specific religious symbols, regional culture and geography rather than multicultural, multiregional and multi-religious context of Nepali society. It seems that minority religion, ethnicity and regional variations that are found in Nepal are missing in the cover images across the curriculum. This article is expected to address the gap seen in the Nepali school educational research and helpful to provide insights that the cover images used in the textbooks are important and powerful meaning makers.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Abstract
491
PDF
47

Downloads

Published

2022-02-13

Versions

How to Cite

Paneru, P. (2022). Visual Images and Interpretations: A Semiotic Analysis of Textbook Covers. SCHOLARS: Journal of Arts &Amp; Humanities, 4(1), 29–43. https://doi.org/10.3126/sjah.v4i1.43051

Issue

Section

Original Research Articles