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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Images with messages
Lester's text offers the most comprehensive overview of visual communication I have come across. His preferred framework is clearly semiotic, but he offers a fair treatment of other theories as well. Section one covers the biological functions of seeing, including the role of the brain, the retina and the eye. He favors the active version of visual processing over the...
Published on August 16, 2003 by Lisa Sayles

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1.0 out of 5 stars very rudimentary
As another reviewer elaborated, this textbook is shallow at best; it has very little depth. If you're looking to conduct research or if you're in a graduate level class, this book is not for you.
Published 4 months ago by Diane Taha


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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Images with messages, August 16, 2003
By 
Lester's text offers the most comprehensive overview of visual communication I have come across. His preferred framework is clearly semiotic, but he offers a fair treatment of other theories as well. Section one covers the biological functions of seeing, including the role of the brain, the retina and the eye. He favors the active version of visual processing over the passive version.

Section two covers what we see which can be summarized with four basic visual perception cues; color, form, depth and movement. Lester discusses how the brain divides and sorts visual messages and explains that how we see helps to explain why we see. Also in section two he introduces the theories of visual communication which he divides into two subdivisions, sensual and perceptual. Sensual theories are based on the physical senses and boil down to the idea that direct or mediated images are composed of light and little else. A visual sensation is a stimulus from the outside that activates nerve cells within your sense organs. These produce raw data and include such theories as gestalt, constructivism and ecological. Gestalt theories conclude that perception is a result of a combination of sensations, and not individual sensual elements (p 52). According to Gestalt laws, there are five factors that identify whether objects in a visual field can be recognized as being in the foreground (positive space) or background (negative space); symmetry, convexity, meaning, area, orientation and attention to visual forms that make up pictures (p 56). Perceptual theories are concerned with the meaning that humans associate with the images they see. In other words these theories have to do with what is done in the brain after combining all the information from your sensual organs. Lester categorizes semiotic and cognitive theories as the perceptual theories (p 67-68). Semiology is a complex system of analysis and the author's overview is quite helpful. Cognitive theories postulate that visual perception is a function of meanings that we associate with objects through learned behavior or intelligent assumptions. Key theorists are Irving Biederman who determined that only 36 geons (geometric ions) are needed to make all objects, Richard Gregory, and Carolyn bloomer who suggests that perception is not stable, rather activities such as habituation, dissonance, projection, expectation, memory selectivity, culture and words can affect visual perception.

In section three, Lester covers visual ethics; visual persuasion in advertising, PR and journalism, and pictorial stereotyping. Section four offers six perspectives for analyzing any image; personal, historical, technical, ethical, cultural and critical, using all of these perspectives he goes on to analyze examples of typography (chapter 8), graphic design (chapter 9), informational graphics (chapter 10), cartoons (chapter 11), photography (chapter 12), motion pictures (chapter 13), television/video (chapter 14), computers (chapter 15), and interactive media (chapter 16). Lester's perspective choices for visual analysis are somewhat unique to him, although there are similarities within or across categories to other perspectives for example his technical analysis is similar to a compositional analysis one might see described in an art history text. This book is an excellent jumping off point for further research into the emerging visual communication field.

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8 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It makes you appreciate things you didn't notice before, May 8, 2000
By 
James Fox (Southern California) - See all my reviews
This book was a eye opening experience that allows you to appreciate something most of us take for granted -- SIGHT. It encourages you to look beyond the physicality of sight and to become acutely aware of the images you see from day-to-day.

Dr. Lester has performed a service for myself and anyone else who reads this book. It drives you to absorb more of the world that we "see" everyday.

I would recommend this book to anyone who has an interest in graphical design, imagery, or to those who want a deeped appreciation for the power that images play in our lives!

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5.0 out of 5 stars SPEEDY SERVICE!, January 18, 2012
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Receieved my textbook in less than a week and no problems with the textbook (no water damage, no high lighting, no ripped pages). Thanks so much again!
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1.0 out of 5 stars very rudimentary, September 16, 2011
As another reviewer elaborated, this textbook is shallow at best; it has very little depth. If you're looking to conduct research or if you're in a graduate level class, this book is not for you.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Very interesting read for school or pleasure!, June 27, 2011
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This was required for a course I took and I really enjoyed reading it. I cannot remember the last time I didn't struggle with my required reading!
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Message is Sad, August 27, 2010
Paul Martin Lester's Visual Communication is an expensive sad publication designed for the academic community who has no idea what the rest of the United States citizens are seeing.
A major fault I was the absence of female photographers especially from the era of the 1930s when the rest of the world had the outstanding work of Dorthea Lange and Margaret Burke-White from which to understand the devestation of that period of time.
Normally I read an entire book before I write a review for this one I did not. I read the first ten chapters and skimmed the rest then dropped the course for which it was used as a text.
Nash Black, author of Indie finalists WRITING AS A SMALL BUSINESS and HAINTS.
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1 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Shallow at best, March 23, 2008
By 
Frank (Chicago, IL USA) - See all my reviews
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This might be a good "primer" for those interested in a quick survey/overview of lots of topics. For those with some experience, it probably won't seem insightful -- or even useful. I've already given my copy away. It just doesn't add knowledge, or anything else, that will make a practicing visual artist's work better or help her/him evolve it.
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0 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Visual Communication: Images with Messages, July 3, 2010
I'll be very short because my irritation is with not even being able to review the book in the first place to see if I want to even purchase it for that price. Too bad for the author/publisher because I tend to skip over buying those books and move on to those I can take a glimps into.Visual Communication: Images with Messages (with InfoTrac®)
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0 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Review of Visual Communication, November 7, 2006
By 
Susan H. Camus (New Orleans, LA United States) - See all my reviews
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This is a great book. I am thoroughly enjoying reading it. Its easy reading helps when studying for a test.
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Visual Communication: Images With Messages
Visual Communication: Images With Messages by Paul Martin Lester (Paperback - November 2, 1998)
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