
Cognitive Linguistics : Current Applications and Future Perspectives.
Title:
Cognitive Linguistics : Current Applications and Future Perspectives.
Author:
Kristiansen, Gitte.
ISBN:
9783110197761
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (512 pages)
Series:
Applications of Cognitive Linguistics [ACL] ; v.1
Applications of Cognitive Linguistics [ACL]
Contents:
Acknowledgements -- Table of contents -- List of contributors -- Introduction Cognitive Linguistics: Current applications and future perspectives -- Part one: The cognitive base -- Methodology in Cognitive Linguistics -- Polysemy and the lexicon -- Cognitive approaches to grammar -- Part two: The conceptual leap -- Three dogmas of embodiment: Cognitive linguistics as a cognitive science -- Metonymy as a usage event -- Conceptual blending in thought, rhetoric, and ideology -- Part three: The psychological basis -- The contested impact of cognitive linguistic research on the psycholinguistics of metaphor understanding -- X IS LIKE Y: The emergence of similarity mappings in children's early speech and gesture -- Part four: Go, tell it on the mountain -- Energy through fusion at last: Synergies in cognitive anthropology and cognitive linguistics -- Cognitive linguistic applications in second or foreign language instruction: rationale, proposals, and evaluation -- Part five: Verbal and beyond: Vision and imagination -- Visual communication: Signed language and cognition -- Non-verbal and multimodal metaphor in a cognitivist framework: Agendas for research -- The fall of the wall between literary studies and linguistics: Cognitive poetics -- Part six: Virtual reality as a new experience -- Artificial intelligence, figurative language and cognitive linguistics -- Computability as a test on linguistics theories -- Author index -- Subject index.
Abstract:
Honorary editor: René Dirven The series Applications of Cognitive Linguistics (ACL) welcomes book proposals from any domain where the theoretical insights developed in Cognitive Linguistics (CL) have been (or could be) fruitfully applied. In the past thirty-five years, the CL movement has articulated a rich and satisfying view of language around a small number of foundational principles. The first one argues that language faculties do not constitute a separate module of cognition, but emerge as specialized uses of more general cognitive abilities. The second principle emphasises the symbolic function of language. The grammar of individual languages (including the lexicon, morphology, and syntax) can be exclusively described as a structured inventory of conventionalized symbolic units. The third principle states that meaning is equated with conceptualization. It is subjective, anthropomorphic, and crucially incorporates humans' experience with their bodies and the world around them. Finally, CL's Usage-Based conception anchors the meaning of linguistic expressions in the rich soil of their social usage. Consequently, usage-related issues such as frequency and entrenchment contribute to their semantic import. Taken together, these principles provide researchers in different academic fields with a powerful theoretical framework for the investigation of linguistic issues in the specific context of their particular disciplines. The primary focus of ACL is to serve as a high level forum for the result of these investigations.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Genre:
Electronic Access:
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