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E-raamat: Cognitive Grammar in Literature

Edited by (University of Nottingham), Edited by (University of Nottingham), Edited by (University of Nottingham), Edited by (University of Nottingham)
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This is the first book to present an account of literary meaning and effects drawing on our best understanding of mind and language in the form of a Cognitive Grammar. The contributors provide exemplary analyses of a range of literature from science fiction, dystopia, absurdism and graphic novels to the poetry of Wordsworth, Hopkins, Sassoon, Balassi, and Dylan Thomas, as well as Shakespeare, Chaucer, Barrett Browning, Whitman, Owen and others. The application of Cognitive Grammar allows the discussion of meaning, translation, ambience, action, reflection, multimodality, empathy, experience and literariness itself to be conducted in newly valid ways. With a Foreword by the creator of Cognitive Grammar, Ronald Langacker, and an Afterword by the cognitive scientist Todd Oakley, the book represents the latest advance in literary linguistics, cognitive poetics and literary critical practice.
List of contributors
vii
Acknowledgements xi
Foreword xiii
Ronald W. Langacker
Chapter 1 Introduction: Cognitive Grammar in literature
1(18)
Chloe Harrison
Louise Nuttall
Peter Stockwell
Wenjuan Yuan
PART I Narrative fiction
Chapter 2 War, worlds and Cognitive Grammar
19(16)
Peter Stockwell
Chapter 3 Construal and comics: the multimodal autobiography of Alison Bechdel's Fun Home
35(18)
Michael Pleyer
Christian W. Schneider
Chapter 4 Attentional windowing in David Foster Wallace's "The Soul Is Not a Smithy'
53(16)
Chloe Harrison
Chapter 5 Resonant Metaphor in Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go
69(14)
Sam Browse
Chapter 6 Constructing a text world for The Handmaid's Tale
83(18)
Louise Nuttall
Chapter 7 Point of view in translation: Lewis Carroll's Alice in grammatical wonderlands
101(18)
Elzbieta Tabakowska
PART II Studies of poetry
Chapter 8 Profiling the flight of `The Windhover'
119(14)
Clara Neary
Chapter 9 Foregrounding the foregrounded: the literariness of Dylan Thomas's `After the funeral'
133(12)
Anne Paivarinta
Chapter 10 Conceptual proximity and the experience of war in Siegfried Sassoon's `A Working Party'
145(16)
Marcello Giovanelli
Chapter 11 Most and now: tense and aspect in Balint Balassi's `Aldott szep punkosdnek'
161(16)
Mike Pincombe
Chapter 12 Fictive motion in Wordsworthian nature
177(18)
Wenjuan Yuan
Chapter 13 The cognitive poetics of if
195(18)
Craig Hamilton
Chapter 14 Representing the represented: verbal variations on Vincent's Bedroom in Aries
213(18)
Alina Kwiatkowska
Afterword: from Cognitive Grammar to systems rhetoric 231(6)
Todd Oakley
References 237(16)
Index 253