Cover image for Language and Ideology : Volume 1: theoretical cognitive approaches.
Language and Ideology : Volume 1: theoretical cognitive approaches.
Title:
Language and Ideology : Volume 1: theoretical cognitive approaches.
Author:
Dirven, René.
ISBN:
9789027299543
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (307 pages)
Series:
Current Issues in Linguistic Theory ; v.204

Current Issues in Linguistic Theory
Contents:
LANGUAGE AND IDEOLOGY VOL.I -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC page -- Table of Contents -- Incorporating Tensions: On the Treatment of Ideology in Cognitive Linguistics -- Language and Ideology: An interview with George Lakoff -- Pragmatism, Ideology and Embodiment -- Does Cognitive Linguistics Live up to its Name? -- Ideological Ground and Relevant Interpretation in a Cognitive Semantics -- Linguistic Dilemmas of Afrocentricity: The Diaspora Experience -- Age/Gender Morphemes Inherit the Biases of their Underlying Dimensions -- How Pervasive are Sexist Ideologies in Grammar? -- Cognitive Linguistics and the Marxist Approach to Ideology -- Linguistics and Ideology in 19th and 20th Century Studies of Language -- Cultural and Conceptual Relativism, Universalism and the Politics of Linguistics -- Index.
Abstract:
Together with its sister volume on Descriptive Cognitive Approaches, this volume explores the contribution which cognitive linguistics can make to the identification and analysis of overt and hidden ideologies. As a theory of language which sees language as the accumulation of the conventionalised conceptualisations of a given linguistic and/or cultural community or sub-group within it, cognitive linguistics is called upon to make its own inroads in the study of ideology. This volume offers theoretical approaches and first discusses the philosophical foundations of cognitive linguistics. The question whether cognitive linguistics is not an ideology itself is not tabooed. The speaker's deictic centre is the anchoring point, not only for spatial, temporal or interactional deixis, but also for cultural and ideological deixis. Cognitive linguistics is also confronted with a severe Marxist critique, but the potential convergence between the two 'philosophies' is highlighted as well. Further the question is raised to what extent the central nervous system and the grammatical system of a language impose sexually biased, and hence ideological representations on cognition. Finally, linguistics itself is seen as a potential bearer of ideological deviations as was the case with the 'politics of linguistics' in Nazi Germany, and even with the quest for the Indo-European homeland in comparative and historical linguistics throughout the 19th century and well into the 20th century.
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.
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: