𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Cover of The Language of Stories (Cambridge Studies in Cognitive Linguistics)

The Language of Stories (Cambridge Studies in Cognitive Linguistics)

✍ Scribed by Dancygier, Barbara


Book ID
110488490
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Year
2012
Tongue
English
Weight
683 KB
Series
Cambridge Studies in Cognitive Linguistics
Category
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781107005822
ASIN
B0062LPOQQ

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


How do we read stories? How do they engage our minds and create meaning? Are they a mental construct, a linguistic one or a cultural one? What is the difference between real stories and fictional ones? This book addresses such questions by describing the conceptual and linguistic underpinnings of narrative interpretation. Barbara Dancygier discusses literary texts as linguistic artifacts, describing the processes which drive the emergence of literary meaning. If a text means something to someone, she argues, there have to be linguistic phenomena that make it possible. Drawing on blending theory and construction grammar, the book focuses its linguistic lens on the concepts of the narrator and the story, and defines narrative viewpoint in a new way. The examples come from a wide spectrum of texts, primarily novels and drama, by authors such as William Shakespeare, Margaret Atwood, Philip Roth, Dave Eggers, Jan Potocki and Mikhail Bulgakov.

**


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Issues in Cognitive Linguistics Volume 3
✍ Stadler, Leon de; Eyrich, Christoph πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 1999 πŸ› DE GRUYTER MOUTON 🌐 English βš– 227 KB

The series Beihefte zur Zeitschrift fΓΌr die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft (BZAW) covers all areas of research into the Old Testament, focusing on the Hebrew Bible, its early and later forms in Ancient Judaism, as well as its branching into many neighboring cultures of the Ancient Near East and the

[Cognitive Linguistics Research] Cogniti
✍ Casad, Eugene H.; Palmer, Gary B. πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 2003 πŸ› Mouton de Gruyter 🌐 English βš– 151 KB

This book applies the theory of cognitive linguistics to the analysis of a variety of grammatical phenomena in non-Indo-European languages. In previous studies of languages from non-Indo-European families, cognitive linguistics has been remarkably useful in explaining non-prototypical structures as