Cultural linguistics : cultural conceptualisations and language /
This ground-breaking book marks a milestone in the history of the newly developed field of Cultural Linguistics, a multidisciplinary area of research that explores the relationship between language and cultural conceptualisations. The most authoritative book in the field to date, it outlines the the...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
[2017]
|
Colección: | Cognitive linguistic studies in cultural contexts ;
v. 8. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cultural Linguistics
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- List of figures
- About the author
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Note on transliteration conventions of Persian transcripts
- Chapter 1. Cultural Linguistics: An overview
- 1.1 Cultural Linguistics
- 1.2 The theoretical framework of Cultural Linguistics
- 1.3 The analytical framework of Cultural Linguistics
- 1.4 An assessment of Cultural Linguistics
- Chapter 2. Cultural conceptualisations and language: The analytical framework
- 2.1 Cultural schemas
- 2.2 Cultural categories2.3 Cultural metaphors
- 2.3.1 Cultural metaphors relating to the Land
- 2.3.2 Cultural metaphors relating to Medicine
- 2.3.3 Creative cultural metaphors
- 2.3.4 The cognitive processing continuum of cultural metaphors
- 2.4 Concluding remarks
- Chapter 3. Embodied cultural metaphors
- 3.1 Embodiment and embodied cognition
- 3.2 Conceptualisations relating to del in contemporary Persian
- 3.3 Del in psychological, intellectual, and person-bound concepts
- 3.3.1 del as the seat of emotions, feelings, and desires
- 3.3.2 del as the centre of thoughts and memories3.3.3 del as the centre of personality traits, character, and mood
- 3.3.4 Summary
- 3.4 Cultural conceptualisations behind the notion of del
- 3.5 Iranian Traditional Medicine (ITM) and temperature terms in Persian
- 3.6 Concluding remarks
- Chapter 4. Research methods in Cultural Linguistics
- 4.1 Conceptual-associative analysis
- 4.2 Conceptual analysis of story recounts
- 4.3 (Meta)discourse analysis
- 4.4 Corpus-based analysis
- 4.5 Ethnographic-conceptual text/visual analysis
- 4.6 Diachronic/synchronic conceptual analysis4.7 Concluding remarks
- Chapter 5. Cultural Linguistics and pragmatics
- 5.1 Pragmemes and practs
- 5.2 Pragmatic schemas
- 5.3 Pragmatic schemas, speech acts/events, pragmemes, and practs
- 5.3.1 shekasteh-nafsi
- 5.3.2 sharmandegi
- 5.3.3 ru-dar-bÃØyesti
- 5.3.4 tÃØâ#x80;#x99;ÃØrof
- 5.4 Pragmatic schemas and cultural cognition
- 5.5 Concluding remarks
- Chapter 6. Cultural Linguistics and emotion research
- 6.1 Cultural conceptualisations relating to Persian qam
- 6.2 Cultural conceptualisations relating to pride in British English and its counterparts in Polish6.3 The word Rain in Aboriginal English
- 6.4 The word Sorry in Aboriginal English
- 6.5 Concluding remarks
- Chapter 7. Cultural Linguistics and religion
- 7.1 Conceptualisations relating to Sufi life
- 7.2 Conceptualisations relating to death in Buddhist and Christian eulogistic idioms
- 7.3 Conceptualisations relating to Sacred Sites in Aboriginal English
- 7.4 Concluding remarks
- Chapter 8. Cultural Linguistics and political discourse