1 / 8

History and Core Concepts of Cognitive Linguistics

History and Core Concepts of Cognitive Linguistics. Laura A. Janda laura.janda @ uit.no. Eleanor Rosch ( Psychology ): Structure of human cognitive categories. Showed that human cognitive categories are not Aristotelian categories , but instead have: Prototypes

katina
Télécharger la présentation

History and Core Concepts of Cognitive Linguistics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Historyand CoreConceptsofCognitiveLinguistics Laura A. Janda laura.janda@uit.no

  2. Eleanor Rosch (Psychology):Structureof human cognitivecategories • Showedthat human cognitivecategoriesare not Aristoteliancategories, butinstead have: • Prototypes • Radial structureofcategories • Confirmed for structureofexistingcategories (fruits & vegetables), for buildingofnewcategories (color), and for inferencing (birds) • Inspiredmanyworks in linguisticsthatlaidthegroundwork for cognitivelinguistics • Fillmore, Kay, McDaniel, Coleman, Lakoff (Rosch1973a-b, 1978; Mervis and Rosch1981)

  3. Earlyworks in linguisticsinspired by Rosch • Fillmore 1975, 1978, 1982: • questions necessary & sufficient features for describing meaning >> replace by radial categories/frame semantics • Kay and McDaniel 1978 • On the linguistic significance of the meanings of basic color terms • Coleman and Kay 1981 • English lie as a protoype (+falsehood is actually the least predictive “feature”) • Lakoff 1977 • Linguistic gestalts

  4. Otherprecursorsofcognitivelinguistics • Lakoff & Johnson 1980: Metaphors We Live By • Ubiquity of metaphor – not just a literary device • Lindner 1981: UP and OUT • structured polysemy of grammatical morphemes, metaphor • Casad 1982: Cora locationals • spatial relations and theirextensions • Fauconnier 1985: Mental Spaces • IdealizedCognitive Model as alternative to “possibleworlds” – a situationmay hold true for a mental spacebut not for reality • Lakoff1987: Women, Fire and Dangerous Things • radial categorystructureoflinguistic units • Brugman 1988: Story ofOVER • polysemy, semantics, and thestructureofthelexicon

  5. No single “guru”, butLangacker stands out Foundations ofCognitiveGrammar(1987, 1991) Concept, Image, and Symbol: The Cognitive Basis ofGrammar(1990) Grammar and Conceptualization(1999) CognitiveGrammar. A Basic Introduction(2008) • Construal • Profiling • SymbolicStructures and SymbolicAssemblies • Elaboration • Subjectification

  6. Someother major players • Croft: Radical Construction Grammar, Verbal aspect • Dabrowska: Acquisition (chunking), non-uniform grammars • Geeraerts: Sociolinguisticvariation, historicalchange • Goldberg: Construction grammar • Talmy: Fictive motion, limits ofgrammaticalexpression(topological vs. Euclidean), sattelite vs. verb framing • Taylor: Linguisticcategorization, possession • Tomasello: Verb-islandhypothesis, joint attention, languageevolution • Turner: Blending

  7. ICLA conferences • Duisburg, Germany 1989 • Santa Cruz, CA 1991 • Leuven, Belgium 1993 • Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1995 • Amsterdam, Netherlands 1997 • Stockholm, Sweden 1999 • Santa Barbara, CA 2001 • La Rioja, Spain 2003 • Seoul, Korea 2005 • Krakow, Poland 2007 • Xi’an, China 2011 • Edmonton, Alberta, Canada 2013

  8. “Tier I” (Nivå 2) International journal since 1989… Currently edited by Ewa Dąbrowska (Sheffield U)

More Related