Catalog Search
 
Advanced Search

My shopping cart cart icon
Your cart is empty

My wish list wishlist icon
Your wish list is empty



Last update:
8 February 2010

© John Benjamins
Home

New Directions in Cognitive Linguistics

Edited by Vyvyan Evans and Stéphanie Pourcel
Bangor University, UK

2009. xi, 519 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2378 4 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
Add to shopping cart

e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 8944 5 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
Ordering information

Add to wish list

Nearly three decades since the publication of the seminal Metaphors We Live By, Cognitive Linguistics is now a mature theoretical and empirical enterprise, with a voluminous associated literature. It is arguably the most rapidly expanding ‘school’ in modern linguistics, and one of the most exciting areas of research within the interdisciplinary project known as cognitive science. As such, Cognitive Linguistics is increasingly attracting a broad readership both within linguistics as well as from neighbouring disciplines including other cognitive and social sciences, and from disciplines within the humanities. This volume contains over 20 papers by leading experts in cognitive linguistics which survey the state of the art and new directions in cognitive linguistics. The volume is divided into 5 sections covering all the traditional areas of study in cognitive linguistics, as well as newer areas, including applications and extensions. Sections include: Approaches to semantics; Approaches to metaphor and blending; Approaches to grammar; Language, embodiment and cognition; Extensions and applications of cognitive linguistics.


Table of contents

Contributors
ix
Acknowledgements
xi
Introduction
Vyvyan Evans and Stéphanie Pourcel
1–11
Part I. Approaches to semantics: Theory and method
Meaning as input: The instructional perspective
Peter Harder
15–26
Semantic representation in LCCM Theory
Vyvyan Evans
27–55
Behavioral profiles: A corpus-based approach to cognitive semantic analysis
Stefan Th. Gries and Dagmar Divjak
57–75
Polysemy, syntax, and variation: A usage-based method for Cognitive Semantics
Dylan Glynn
77–104
Part II. Approaches to metaphor and blending: Theory and method
Solving the riddle of metaphor: A salience-based model for metaphorical interpretation in a discourse context
Mimi Ziwei Huang
107–126
When is a linguistic metaphor conceptual metaphor?
Daniel Casasanto
127–145
Generalized integration networks
Gilles Fauconnier
147–160
Genitives and proper names in constructional blends
Barbara Dancygier
161–181
Part III. Approaches to grammar: Theory and method
What’s (in) a construction? Complete inheritance vs. full-entry models
Arne Zeschel
185–200
Words as constructions
Ewa Dąbrowska
201–223
Constructions and constructional meaning
Ronald W. Langacker
225–267
Partonomic structures in syntax
Edith A. Moravcsik
269–285
Part IV. Language, embodiment and cognition: Theory and application
Language as a biocultural niche and social institution
Chris Sinha
289–309
Understanding embodiment: Psychophysiological models in traditional medical systems
Magda Altman
311–329
Get and the grasp schema: A new approach to conceptual modelling in image schema semantics
Paul Chilton
331–370
Motion scenarios in cognitive processes
Stéphanie Pourcel
371–391
Part V. Extensions and applications of cognitive linguistics
Toward a social cognitive linguistics
William Croft
395–420
Cognitive and linguistic factors in evaluating text quality: Global versus local?
Ruth A. Berman and Bracha Nir
421–440
Reference points and dominions in narratives: A discourse level exploration of the reference point model of anaphora
Sarah van Vliet
441–464
The dream as blend in David Lynch’s Mulholland Drive
Johanna Rubba
465–498
“I was in that room!”: Conceptual integration of content and context in a writer’s vs. a prosecutor’s description of a murder
Esther Pascual
499–516
Index
517–519