From Perception to Meaning: Image Schemas in Cognitive Linguistics

Front Cover
Beate Hampe
Walter de Gruyter, Aug 22, 2008 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 496 pages

The 1987 landmark publications by G. Lakoff and M. Johnson made image schema one of the cornerstone concepts of the emerging experientialist paradigm of Cognitive Linguistics, a framework founded upon the rejection of the mind-body dichotomy and stressing the fundamentally embodied nature of meaning, imagination and reason - hence language. Conceived of as the pre-linguistic, dynamic and highly schematic gestalts arising directly from motor movement, object manipulation, and perceptual interaction, image schemas served to anchor abstract reasoning and imagination to sensori-motor patterns in the conceptual theory of metaphor.

Being itself informed by preceding crosslinguistic work on semantic primitives in the linguistic representations of spatial relations (carried out by L. Talmy, R. Langacker, and others), the notion has inspired a large amount of subsequent research and debate on diverse issues ranging from the meaning, structure and acquisition of natural languages to the embodied mind itself.

From Perception to Meaning is the first survey of current image-schema theory and offers a collection of original and innovative essays by leading scholars, many of whom have shaped the theory from the very beginning. The edition unites essays on major issues in recent research on image-schemas - from aspects of their definition and linguistic formalization, their psychological status and neural grounding to their role as semantic universals and primitives in language acquisition. The book will thus not only be welcomed by linguists of a cognitive orientation, but will prove relevant to philosophers, psychologists, and anthropologists interested in language, and indeed to anyone studying the embodied mind.

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Contents

Introduction
1
The philosophical significance of image schemas
15
Refining a definition
35
From linguistic analysis to neural grounding
57
Implications for cognitive semantics
93
The psychological status of image schemas
113
III Image schemas and the transition to verbal thought
137
Image schemata in the brain
165
Situated and compound image schemas
285
Whats in a schema? Bodily mimesis and the grounding of language
313
Image schemas vs Complex Primitives in crosscultural spatial cognition
343
Dynamic patterns of CONTAINMENT
369
Image schemas and verbal synaesthesia
395
Image schemas and gesture
421
Forcedynamic dimensions of rhetorical effect
443
Backmatter
475

The fundamental system of spatial schemas in language
199
On the semantic unity of over
235

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About the author (2008)

Beate Hampe is Assistant Professor at the English Department of the Friedrich Schiller-Universität, Jena, Germany.

Joseph E. Grady has left university and works for a company called Cultural Logic which specializes in applied cognitive linguistics/anthropology in Washington, DC, USA.

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