The Role of Metaphor in the Structuring of Emotion Concepts
(2013) In Cognitive Semiotics Vol. V(1-2). p.244-267- Abstract
- Conceptual metaphor theory (CMT) is one of the most prolific frameworks in the study of emotion
concepts. Following the seminal work of Lakoff and Johnson (1980) and subsequent work by Kövecses
(1986, 1990) and Kövecses and Lakoff (1987), an impressive number of studies in cognitive linguistics and
psycholinguistics have sought to document and confirm the claim that conceptual metaphor (CM)
structures affective concepts. I attempt a brief overview of CMT claims about and CMT-inspired research
on emotion concepts. I continue by presenting a study based on data collected in six languages, to assess
the role of CM in the structuring of emotion concepts. I introduce the procedure, the... (More) - Conceptual metaphor theory (CMT) is one of the most prolific frameworks in the study of emotion
concepts. Following the seminal work of Lakoff and Johnson (1980) and subsequent work by Kövecses
(1986, 1990) and Kövecses and Lakoff (1987), an impressive number of studies in cognitive linguistics and
psycholinguistics have sought to document and confirm the claim that conceptual metaphor (CM)
structures affective concepts. I attempt a brief overview of CMT claims about and CMT-inspired research
on emotion concepts. I continue by presenting a study based on data collected in six languages, to assess
the role of CM in the structuring of emotion concepts. I introduce the procedure, the corpus, and the
analyses that have been carried out, including a detailed discussion of the considerations that informed the
coding decisions applied to the corpus in a tentative quantitative analysis. Finally, I highlight a series of
difficulties and controversies raised by CMT-driven analysis of emotion concepts that could be employed
in hypothesis-driven experiments to test conceptual processing claims made within CMT. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4221512
- author
- Sauciuc, Gabriela-Alina LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2013
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Cognitive Semiotics
- volume
- Vol. V
- issue
- 1-2
- pages
- 244 - 267
- publisher
- De Gruyter
- ISSN
- 2235-2066
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- cb65cfec-0d13-4021-9f4b-3f76ae29ca37 (old id 4221512)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 10:11:06
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 19:42:18
@article{cb65cfec-0d13-4021-9f4b-3f76ae29ca37, abstract = {{Conceptual metaphor theory (CMT) is one of the most prolific frameworks in the study of emotion<br/><br> concepts. Following the seminal work of Lakoff and Johnson (1980) and subsequent work by Kövecses<br/><br> (1986, 1990) and Kövecses and Lakoff (1987), an impressive number of studies in cognitive linguistics and<br/><br> psycholinguistics have sought to document and confirm the claim that conceptual metaphor (CM)<br/><br> structures affective concepts. I attempt a brief overview of CMT claims about and CMT-inspired research<br/><br> on emotion concepts. I continue by presenting a study based on data collected in six languages, to assess<br/><br> the role of CM in the structuring of emotion concepts. I introduce the procedure, the corpus, and the<br/><br> analyses that have been carried out, including a detailed discussion of the considerations that informed the<br/><br> coding decisions applied to the corpus in a tentative quantitative analysis. Finally, I highlight a series of<br/><br> difficulties and controversies raised by CMT-driven analysis of emotion concepts that could be employed<br/><br> in hypothesis-driven experiments to test conceptual processing claims made within CMT.}}, author = {{Sauciuc, Gabriela-Alina}}, issn = {{2235-2066}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{1-2}}, pages = {{244--267}}, publisher = {{De Gruyter}}, series = {{Cognitive Semiotics}}, title = {{The Role of Metaphor in the Structuring of Emotion Concepts}}, volume = {{Vol. V}}, year = {{2013}}, }