BELÉN SORIA CLIVILLÉS

PAPERS ON LINE

 

 

 

Romero, E. y Soria, B.: 2005, "Cognitive metaphor theory revisited", Journal of Literary Semantics 34: 1-20.

Full text available as:

Adobe PDF

Abstract:

This paper provides a framework which, being compatible with Lakoff and Johnson’s theory (1980), allows a description of metaphoric verbal utterances. The development of this theoretical expansion is encouraged by Lakoff and Johnson’s distinction between nonliteral and literal metaphoric expressions, and by the fact that they do not provide an explanation of the nonliteral metaphoric use of expressions as distinct from the literal metaphoric one. They simply say that metaphoric expressions are nonliteral when they are parts that are not used in our normal metaphoric concepts. This suggestion is included in our model, in which a metaphoric utterance is identified when the speaker perceives both a contextual abnormality and a conceptual contrast, and it is interpreted using, among other things, a pragmatic process of mapping to derive subpropositional metaphoric provisional meanings. This explanation of the metaphoric mechanism allows an explanation of the utterances in which nonliteral metaphoric expressions intervene without having to resort to a previous literal interpretation of these utterances.

 

Key Words:

Metaphoric utterance, metaphoric expressions, contextual abnormality, conceptual contrast, mapping, metaphoric provisional meaning.

Subjects:

Linguistics: Semantics
Linguistics: Pragmatics
Philosophy: Philosophy of language
Cognitive Science: Cognitive psychology
 

Notes: This is just a "domestic" version of the paper, if you want the published one, clik here.

Deposited by:

Belén Soria on 21/10/2005