基本説明
New in paperback. Hardcover was published in 2009. 'After reading Bartminski's book, it will be difficult to go along the traditional, trodden paths, as if nothing would have happened. Let us then change our way of doing linguistics or, better, let us get back the good old traditions in their new form. And let us thank the translator, the editor and the publisher for making this excellent collection accessible to all cognitive linguists.'
Enrique Bernardez, Universidad Complutense, Madrid, Review of Cognitive Linguistics, 8:2 (December 2010)
Full Description
The book provides an introduction into a highly developed, coherent, and extensively tested cognitive linguistic approach to lexical semantics, which is not currently accessible to readers of English. This makes the book important to researchers and students in lexical semantics, in Cognitive Linguistics and beyond. It also strengthens the Cognitive Linguistics enterprise in general, by showing that the main tenets of this approach are not an incidental historical development in a particular corner of the world, but rather are arrived at by scholars working in hugely different contexts independently of each other. The book therefore will appeal to all researchers in Cognitive Linguistics. Furthermore, the book constitutes a contribution to the intellectual exchange between international academic discourses that mostly develop independently of each other - an exchange that has often provided major impetus for scientific development, as illustrated by the influence of the belated translations of works by Bakhtin, Lotman, Vygotsky, and Luria, among others.
Contents
1. The Ethnolinguistic School of Lublin and Anglo-American Cognitive Linguistics (Jorg Zinken) 2. What is Cognitive Ethnolinguistics? 3. Linguistic Worldview and How to Reconstruct it 4. Values as the Foundation of Linguistic Worldview 5. The Stereotypes as an Object of Linguistic Description 6. The 'Cognitive Definition' in the Description of Stereotypes 7. Viewpoint, Perspective, and Linguistic Worldview 8. Profiling and the Subject-Oriented Interpretation of the World 9. The Subject's Viewpoint(s) in Language, Text and Discourse 10. The Stereotype of the Sun in Folk Polish 11. The Polish Stereotype of MOTHER: Towards a Cognitive Definition 12. The Polish DOM (House/Home) in its Physical, Social and Cultural Aspects 13. The Polish OJCZYZNA (Homeland): Its Base Stereotype and Ideological Profiles 14. Changes in the Polish Stereotype of 'a German' 15. Prawica 'Right Wing' and Lewica 'Left Wing': Profiles in Contemporary Discourse 16. Varieties of Fate: The Polish Los and Dola; the Russian Sud'ba 17. The Conception of the Linguistic Worldview in Slavic Comparative Research Afterward