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Figurative Language (Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics)

Figurative Language (Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics)

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Barbara Dancygier
Cambridge University Press, 3/6/2014
EAN 9780521184731, ISBN10: 0521184738

Paperback, 258 pages, 24.4 x 17 x 1.5 cm
Language: English

This lively introduction to figurative language explains a broad range of concepts, including metaphor, metonymy, simile, and blending, and develops new tools for analyzing them. It coherently grounds the linguistic understanding of these concepts in basic cognitive mechanisms such as categorization, frames, mental spaces, and viewpoint; and it fits them into a consistent framework which is applied to cross-linguistic data and also to figurative structures in gesture and the visual arts. Comprehensive and practical, the book includes analyses of figurative uses of both word meanings and linguistic constructions. • Provides definitions of major concepts • Offers in-depth analyses of examples, exploring multiple levels of complexity • Surveys figurative structures in different discourse genres • Helps students to connect figurative usage with the conceptual underpinnings of language • Goes beyond English to explore cross-linguistic and cross-modal data

1. Introduction
2. The basics of metaphor
3. Metaphoric structure
levels and relations
4. Mental spaces and blending
5. Metonymy
6. Grammatical constructions and figurative meaning
7. The cross-linguistic study of metaphor
8. Figurative language in discourse
9. Concluding remarks.

Advance praise: 'This book breaks new ground in the cognitive linguistic study of metaphor, simile and metonymy. A must read for anyone interested in figurative language, cognition and discourse.' Elena Semino, Lancaster University

Advance praise: 'Figurative Language is a marvelous book that will serve as both a very readable textbook for students and a source of research ideas for even expert figurative language scholars. The presentation of the complex cognitive linguistic literature on this topic is complete, well-organized, and illustrated with wonderful examples from literature, politics, science and religious discourse. I was most impressed by the way Dancygier and Sweetser blend together the diverse aspects of figuration into a more general framework that reveals deeper insights into the relations between language, thought, and culture.' Raymond W. Gibbs, Jr, University of California, Santa Cruz