TY - BOOK ID - 19026057 TI - Metaphor and metonymy in comparison and contrast AU - Dirven, René AU - Pörings, Ralf PY - 2002 SN - 3110173735 1282345338 9786612345333 3110219190 3110173743 9783110219197 3110166909 9783110166903 9783110173734 9783110166903 9781282345331 6612345330 9783110173741 PB - Berlin New York Mouton de Gruyter DB - UniCat KW - Cognitieve grammatica. KW - Metaforen. KW - Metonymie. KW - Lexicology. Semantics KW - Psycholinguistics KW - Grammar KW - 801.56 KW - Cognitive grammar KW - Metaphor KW - Metonyms KW - Metonymy KW - Parabole KW - Cognitive linguistics KW - 801.56 Syntaxis. Semantiek KW - Syntaxis. Semantiek KW - Opitz, Martin, KW - Opitz, Martin KW - Figures of speech KW - Reification KW - Grammar, Comparative and general KW - German literature. KW - Criticism and interpretation. KW - Cognitive grammar. KW - Metaphor. KW - Metonyms. KW - Languages & Literatures KW - Philology & Linguistics KW - Grammar, Comparative and general - Clauses KW - Grammar, Comparative and general - Syntax KW - Discourse analysis UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:19026057 AB - The book elaborates one of Roman Jakobson's many brilliant ideas, i.e. his insight that the two cognitive strategies of the metaphoric and the metonymic are the end-points on a continuum of conceptualization processes. This elaboration is achieved on the background of Lakoff and Johnson's two domain approach, i.e. the mapping of a source onto a target domain of conceptualization. Further approaches dwell on different stretches of this metaphor-metonymy continuum. Still other papers probe into the specialized conceptual division of labor associated with both modes of thought. Two new breakthroughs in the cognitive linguistics approach to metaphor and metonymy have recently been developed: one is the three-domain approach, which concentrates on the new blends that become possible after the integration or the blending of source and target domain elements; the other is the approach in terms of primary scenes and subscenes which often determine the way source and target domains interact. ER -