توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Dynamism in Metaphor and Beyond
نام کتاب : Dynamism in Metaphor and Beyond
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : پویایی در استعاره و فراتر از آن
سری : Metaphor in Language, Cognition, and Communication; 9
نویسندگان : Herbert L. Colston (editor), Teenie Matlock (editor), Gerard J. Steen (editor)
ناشر : John Benjamins
سال نشر : 2022
تعداد صفحات : 369
ISBN (شابک) : 9027211418 , 9789027211415
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 22 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Dynamism in Metaphor and Beyond
Editorial page
Title page
Copyright page
Table of contents
Art
Prologue: On the dangers of metaphoring
1. Introduction
2. A young person’s puzzlement
3. Trivialization
4. Manipulating metaphors
5. ‘Locker room talk’ and tautologies
6. Metaphors as mental instruments: Conclusion
References
Introduction
A brief history
Our goals and gains
Organization by themes
New windows into cognition and communication
Account expansion, flexibility, or integration: Dynamism in action
Influencers and drivers: Bigger pictures
Conclusion
Part I. New windows into cognition and communication
Metaphor in The Cancer Poetry Project
1. Illness, image, metaphor: The Cancer Poetry Project
2. Cancer and metaphor
3. Metaphor in language, thought and communication about cancer
4. Metaphor in cancer poetry, therapy, and communication: The importance of genre
References
Narrative experiences of metaphor
Metaphor processing in narrative contexts
Dual processes in narrative
Intuitive judgments in narrative experiences
Reflective judgments in narrative experiences
Readers’ distinct narrative experiences
Conclusions
References
Researching embodied metaphor production through improvisational dance practice
Introduction
Solo dance practice, from sound to action
Internal dynamics of the dancer’s translation process
Duet dance practice: From sound to shared action in interactive dynamic systems
Mechanisms in interactive sense-making
Artistic research as a mode of inquiry
References
Feeling for speaking: How expressive body movements ground verbal descriptions of emotions
Introduction
Study design
Data
Methods
Findings
Micro-analytic case studies
Surprise is straightening oneself up
Pride is a feeling of raised shoulders and an upright posture
Fear is a lump of lead in the belly and a contracted body
Happiness is a feeling that wants to get out and up in circles
Is feeling for speaking a frequent phenomenon?
Feeling first: A relevant phenomenon?
Variable forms of embodied grounding
Summary
Conclusion: Feeling for speaking – experiencing grounds speaking
Acknowledgements
References
Multimodal body, multimodal mind, multimodal communication
An illumination
The foundation of communication is multimodal
To know a communicative system is to know a relational network of form-meaning pairs and how they blend
Communication science and multimodal big data
An infrastructure for research on multimodal communication
Examples
Conclusion
References
Fictive motion in the wild: Chapter for Dynamism in metaphor and beyond
1. Introduction
2. What is fictive motion?
3. How is fictive motion understood?
4. Fictive motion in travel language
5. Fictive motion in hiking guidebooks
6. Closing remarks
References
Part II. Account expansion, flexibility, or integration: Dynamism in action
Extended CMT and the dynamic systems theory of metaphor: A comparison
Embodied metaphor vs. discourse metaphor
An informal process model
The extended view and other theories
Extended CMT and the dynamic systems view
Conclusion
References
Communication, comprehension, and interpretation
1. Introduction
2. Relevance, cognition and communication
3. Comprehension and interpretation
4. Indeterminacy in communication
5. Concluding remarks
Acknowledgements
References
Between embodiment and usage: Conventionalized figurative expressions and the notion of ‘idiom set’
1. Introduction: Embodiment, usage, metaphor
2. Multimodality in discourse and constructicon
3. The set of expressions licensed by the ‘immersion schema’
4. Case study: The idiom set licensed by [up to X in Y]
4.1 Corpus data and methods applied
4.2 Data retrieval and coding
4.3 Results of the quantitative analyses of the verbal instantiations
4.4 Interim discussion: Corpus data and embodiment
4.5 Co-speech gestures: Results and discussion
5. Individual variation in the use of the immersion schema
6. Metaphoricity and creativity in the use of immersion idioms
7. Metaphor between embodiment and usage: Conclusions
References
Metaphors and meaning-making in young people’s talk about climate change
Introduction
Metaphor in science and education
Metaphor and the discourse of climate change
Analysing metaphor in discourse
Data and method
Analysis
Greenhouses and high/constant temperatures
Human beings as plants
Greenhouses, blankets and layers
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Experiential viewpoint, simile and dynamicity in discourse
1. Types of experience and experiential viewpoint
2. Simile and metaphor: Constructional features and discourse
3. Discourse dynamicity and figurative form: Simile and other tropes
4. Non-figurative narrative elaboration
5. Where does this lead?
References
Sources of examples
Metaphor and elaboration in context
Introduction
Metaphoric mappings in language & thought
Metaphor framing in decision-making
Are metaphors just lexical primes?
Interim summary
What schematic elaboration leaves out
Conclusions
References
Part III. Influencers and drivers: Bigger pictures
Figurativity: Cognitive, because it’s social
Social motivations: Our social addiction
Social connection
Social status
Socially derived sense-of-self
Language (figurative and other): Our social fix
Figurative language and pragmatic effects
Figurative language and social processes
Language’s social foundation
Figurative language revisited: Affording sociality through cognitive ability consideration
The forms of figurativity
Figurative (and other) language, cognition and social functioning
Conclusion
References
Conceptual blending and memes
1. Analogical reasoning
2. Conceptual blending theory
3. Conceptual blending and progressive alignment
4. Dueling cartoons
5. Memes
6. Memes are multimodal constructions
7. Something old, something new
8. Conclusion
References
How to talk about motion without verbs
Noun dominance in early language
The salience of motion in early cognition
Early words for motion other than verbs
Nouns
Prepositions and function words
Early meanings of up and down
Early meanings of hi and bye
Other early words for motion
Conclusions
References
Defaultness vs. constructionism: The case of default constructional sarcasm and default non-constructional literalness
1. Overview
2. Testing the defaultness hypothesis
2.1 Defining defaultness
2.2 Predictions
3. The role of defaultness in affecting processing, pleasure, and pragmatic cueing
4. Constructions
5. Conclusions: Non/default vs. non/constructional interpretations
Acknowledgements
Funding
References
Appendix A
Relevance theory perspectives on web-mediated communication
1. Introduction
2. An ultra-short & informal version of key dimensions of RT
3. The co-construction of identity and trust on web platforms
4. The TripAdvisor platform as service, communication template, and interface
TripAdvisor as service for creating an online identity
Format of the communication template
Interface from the receiver’s perspective
5. An RT characterization of communication on TripAdvisor
6. From platform to agent: TripAdvisor as communicator
7. Concluding remarks
References
Language happens
Introduction
A solitary language processor is not what processes language
A solitary brain is not what processes language
A solitary person is not what processes language
A community of people is what processes language
References