Cover image for The Linguistic Worldview : Ethnolinguistics, Cognition, and Culture.
The Linguistic Worldview : Ethnolinguistics, Cognition, and Culture.
Title:
The Linguistic Worldview : Ethnolinguistics, Cognition, and Culture.
Author:
Glaz, Adam.
ISBN:
9788376560748
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (492 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 Can Polish ethnolinguistics become a philological keystone of the humanities? -- Chapter 2 The Linguistic Worldview and literature -- Chapter 3 The Linguistic Worldview and conceptual disintegration: Wisława Szymborska's poem Ident -- Chapter 4 What words tell us: phenomenology, cognitive ethnolinguistics, and poetry -- Chapter 5 Ethnolinguistics and literature: the meaning of svědomí 'conscience' in the writings of -- Chapter 6 Cognitive play in Daniil Kharms' "Blue Notebook №10" -- Chapter 7 Polish zwierzęta 'animals' and jabłka 'apples': an ethnosemantic inquiry -- Chapter 8 The cognitive definition as a text of culture -- Chapter 9 The cognitive definition of iron (żelazo) in Polish folk tradition -- Chapter 10 Stereotypes and values in the linguistic worldview -- Chapter 11 The linguistic-cultural portrait of Saint Agatha in Polish folk tradition -- Chapter 12 Linguistic categories in onomasiological perspective. The category of quantity in conte -- Chapter 13 The Polish linguistic view of oral and written text -- Chapter 14 "Who is doing the thinking?" The concept of the THINKING SUBJECT in Polish -- Chapter 15 The concept of NIEWOLNIK 'slave' in Polish: an ethnolinguistic panchronic reconnaissanc -- Chapter 16 The linguistic view of patriotism in selected Polish political commentaries -- Chapter 17 A linguistic picture, image, or view of "Polish Cognitive Studies" -- Chapter 18 Reflections upon Bartmiński's ethnolinguistic approach to language and culture -- Chapter 19 Language vis-à-vis culture in Jerzy Bartmiński's cognitive ethnolinguistics -- Chapter 20 Viewpoint and cognitive distance -- Chapter 21 Jerzy Bartmiński's linguistic worldview meets the Western cognitive tradition: the sema.

Chapter 22 Evidentiality and the epistemic use of the Icelandic verbs sjá and heyra. A cultural l -- Chapter 23 Self-presentation of the speaking subject. Selected interviews with ex-chancellors of t -- Chapter 24 Linguistic views of enslavement in biographical narratives of Poles in Kazakhstan -- Name Index -- Subject Index.
Abstract:
The book is concerned with the questions posed in Jerzy Bartmi?ski's (Lublin, Poland) linguistic worldview program: What is the linguistic worldview? Does one language contain one worldview? Are there literary, poetic, or auctorial worldviews? Some chapters have been inspired by this approach but do not follow it in detail, a few present independent but related research, while others still offer a critical reappraisal.
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.
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