Washing the brain: metaphor and hidden ideology
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amsterdam [u.a.]
Benjamins
2007
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XVI, 430 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9789027227201 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Washing the brain |b metaphor and hidden ideology |c Andrew Goatly |
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300 | |a XVI, 430 S. |b graph. Darst. | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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---|---|
adam_text | Table
of
contents
List of tables
xv
List of figures
xvii
Preface
ι
section
ι
9
CHAPTER
1
Introducing metaphor n
ід
Some terms for analysing metaphors n
1.2
Inter-relations between metaphors
12
1.3
The theory of conceptual metaphor
13
1.4
Characterising conceptual metaphors and metaphor themes
17
1.5
Literal language, conventional metaphor and original metaphor
21
1.6
Convention, commonsense and latent ideology
25
1.7
Conclusion: category is divided area
30
CHAPTER
2
Metaphors of power
35
2.1
Introduction
35
2.2
IMPORTANT IS BIG, POWER/CONTROL IS ABOVE, IMPORTANCE/STATUS IS
HIGH
35
2.3
IMPORTANT IS CENTRAL 40
2.4
RACE IS COLOUR, GOOD IS PURE/CLEAN/WHITE
45
2.5
DISEASE IS INVASION
49
2.6
activity is movement forwards and the cult of speed >i
2.7
Time and space metaphors
бо
2.8
TIME IS xVIONEy/COMMODITY
68
2.9
Education, socialisation and time: Harry Potter and the Philosopher s
stone
69
2.10
ACTIVITY IS FIGHTING
72
2.11
The adversarial system in law, politics, the media and philosophy
78
2.12
sex is violence and rape
83
2.13
Summary
85
CHAPTER
3
Metaphors for humans and the living world
89
3.1
Introduction
89
3.2
HUMAN IS FOOD
89
3.3
Life as a commodity
90
3.4
QUALITY IS MONEY/WEALTH
95
3.4.1
Privatisation of natural resources
97
3.5
organisation/system is machine
100
3.6
human is machine
юз
3.6.1
Lexical evidence for the prevalence of the metaphor
103
3.6.2
Science, technology and the mind/body as machine
107
3.6.3
Objections to mechanistic views of humans
111
3.6.4
The Santiago theory of cognition
113
3.6.5
Haraway
s
cyborg manifesto
114
3.7
Summary
117
chapter
4
Humans as animals, literal or metaphorical?
119
4.1
Impositive
metaphors and subjective metaphors
119
4.2
landscape/weather is a human body?
121
4. 3
human is animal? i25
4.3.1
Human as more or less/a kind of animal
-
selfish, competitive
and aggressive
128
4.3.2
Humans as more or less animals
-
but co-operative and symbiotic
140
4.3.3
Humans as in many respects animals
144
4.3.4
Humans as possibly like animals in many respects, but ideally
as different
148
4.3.5
Humans as in some/few respects like an animal
153
4.3.6
Human reductionism
157
4.4
Summary
159
CHAPTER
5
Interactions between metaphor themes
163
5.1
Introduction
163
5.2
Multivalency
164
5.2.1
Multivalency
->
more
=
good
165
5.2.2
Multivalency
->
change
=
success/development
170
5.3
Evaluative oppositions
177
5.3.1 RELATIONSHIP IS PROXIMITY/COHESION V. FREEDOM IS SPACE TO MOVE I78
5.3.2
Change v. stability in Relationships
187
5.4
A complex case of metaphor theme interaction
192
5.5
Diversification
197
5.5.1
Diverse metaphors for emotion
197
5.5.2
Diverse metaphors for education
206
5.5.3
Summary of diversification
213
5.6
Summary of metaphorical interactions
214
Introduction to section
2
CHAPTER
6
Are metaphorical themes universal?
217
6.1
Mind, body and culture
217
6.2
Metonymy as basis of all conceptual metaphor themes
218
6.3
EMOTION IS SENSE IMPRESSION
224
6.3.1
Damasio s theory of the emotions
224
6.3.2
emotion as cause of emotion metonymy
230
6.3.3
Specific emotional/bodily responses
236
6.4
The cultural influences on emotion metaphors
243
6.4.1
Metaphor themes for anger in English
244
6.4.2
Cultural variations in metaphor themes for anger
248
6.4.3
Humoral theory and the body-cultural history debate
250
6.5
Challenges to the universality of conceptual metaphor themes
256
6.5.1
No such exact target concept exists in one culture/language as exists in an¬
other
257
6.5.2
No such exact source concept exists in one culture/language as exists in an
■
other
260
6.5.3
Target varies with the source
262
6.5.4
Sources and targets are paired differently
265
6.5.5
Different grounds or partial mapping of potential correspondences
267
6.5.6
General identity of pairing with specific differences
270
6.6
Grady,
primary metaphors and multivalency
270
6.7
Questioning the
métonymie
basis of metaphor themes
273
6.8
The body as biological or historical and cultural?
276
CHAPTER
7
Grammar, metaphor and ecology
281
7.1
Introduction
281
7.2
The noun-verb/thing-process construction
282
7.3
The typical clause and canonical events
284
7.4
Canonical events, the Newtonian world-view and industrialisation
288
7.4.1
Industrialising nature
290
7.4.2
The role of ideological metaphors in the industrialisation of nature
295
7.5
Modern scientific challenges to Newtonian dynamics
298
7.6
Congruent language and grammatical metaphor
302
7.7
Grammatical metaphors for modern science
305
7.7.1
Activation of tokens
307
7.7.2
Activation of experiences (phenomena)
307
7.7.3
Ambient structures or dummy subjects: prop it and existential there
308
7.7.4
Activation of circumstances
309
7.7.5
Creative processes and cognate objects
309
7.7.6
Reciprocal and reflexive verbs
309
7.7.7
Ergativity
310
7.7.8
Nominalization
313
7.8
Niitsi powahsin (Blackfoot) grammar as radical metaphor
315
7.8.1
Emphasis on verbs in Niitsi powahsin
317
7.8.2
Nominalisations
319
7.8.3
Niitsi powahsin (Blackfoot) speakers perspectives
320
7.9
Other relevant aspects of Blackfoot world-view
323
7.10
Possession
326
7.10.1
Action schema
327
7.10.2
Location, existence and other
schemas
327
7.10.3
Ideology and the action schema
328
7.11
Conclusion and summary: process philosophies and ideologies
330
CHAPTER
8
Capitalism and the developmentof ideological metaphors
335
8.1
Introduction
335
8.2
The ideological tradition of capitalist economic philosophy
336
8.2.1
Competition and conflict
337
8.2.2
Self-interest, individualism and the family
344
8.2.3
Man is animal
349
8.2.4
Property
351
8.2.5
Summary
357
8.2.6
Newtonian influence on economic philosophers
359
8.2.7
Man and society as machines
361
8.2.8
Quality and quantity
365
8.2.9
QUALITY IS WEALTH/MONEY
367
8.2.10
Economic virtues and time is money/commodity
373
8.2.11
Progressivism in Darwin: change
=
good
379
8.2.12
Capitalist economic philosophers, experientialism and the contemporary
theory of metaphor
380
8.3
A critique of Lakoff
s
Moral Politics
383
8.4
Reductionism or not?
388
8.4.1
Feyerabend, Prigogine and reductionism
390
8.4.2
Experiential cognitive science as reductionism
392
8.4.3
Literalisation,
reductionism and ideology
393
8.4.4
A less-reductionist model of discourse
393
8.5
Envoi: a meditation on incarnation
395
8.6
Summary and conclusion
401
Bibliography
403
Main index
415
Name and author index
45-3
Index of languages
42/
Index of metonymy themes
χ
as
γ
metaphor themes
χ
is
%
metaphor equations
χ = γ
and theme reversals
429
|
adam_txt |
Table
of
contents
List of tables
xv
List of figures
xvii
Preface
ι
section
ι
9
CHAPTER
1
Introducing metaphor n
ід
Some terms for analysing metaphors n
1.2
Inter-relations between metaphors
12
1.3
The theory of conceptual metaphor
13
1.4
Characterising conceptual metaphors and metaphor themes
17
1.5
Literal language, conventional metaphor and original metaphor
21
1.6
Convention, commonsense and latent ideology
25
1.7
Conclusion: category is divided area
30
CHAPTER
2
Metaphors of power
35
2.1
Introduction
35
2.2
IMPORTANT IS BIG, POWER/CONTROL IS ABOVE, IMPORTANCE/STATUS IS
HIGH
35
2.3
IMPORTANT IS CENTRAL 40
2.4
RACE IS COLOUR, GOOD IS PURE/CLEAN/WHITE
45
2.5
DISEASE IS INVASION
49
2.6
activity is movement forwards and the cult of speed >i
2.7
Time and space metaphors
бо
2.8
TIME IS xVIONEy/COMMODITY
68
2.9
Education, socialisation and time: Harry Potter and the Philosopher's
stone
69
2.10
ACTIVITY IS FIGHTING
72
2.11
The adversarial system in law, politics, the media and philosophy
78
2.12
sex is violence and rape
83
2.13
Summary
85
CHAPTER
3
Metaphors for humans and the living world
89
3.1
Introduction
89
3.2
HUMAN IS FOOD
89
3.3
Life as a commodity
90
3.4
QUALITY IS MONEY/WEALTH
95
3.4.1
Privatisation of natural "resources"
97
3.5
organisation/system is machine
100
3.6
human is machine
юз
3.6.1
Lexical evidence for the prevalence of the metaphor
103
3.6.2
Science, technology and the mind/body as machine
107
3.6.3
Objections to mechanistic views of humans
111
3.6.4
The Santiago theory of cognition
113
3.6.5
Haraway
s
cyborg manifesto
114
3.7
Summary
117
chapter
4
Humans as animals, literal or metaphorical?
119
4.1
Impositive
metaphors and subjective metaphors
119
4.2
landscape/weather is a human body?
121
4. 3
human is animal? i25
4.3.1
Human as more or less/a kind of animal
-
selfish, competitive
and aggressive
128
4.3.2
Humans as more or less animals
-
but co-operative and symbiotic
140
4.3.3
Humans as in many respects animals
144
4.3.4
Humans as possibly like animals in many respects, but ideally
as different
148
4.3.5
Humans as in some/few respects like an animal
153
4.3.6
Human reductionism
157
4.4
Summary
159
CHAPTER
5
Interactions between metaphor themes
163
5.1
Introduction
163
5.2
Multivalency
164
5.2.1
Multivalency
->
more
=
good
165
5.2.2
Multivalency
->
change
=
success/development
170
5.3
Evaluative oppositions
177
5.3.1 RELATIONSHIP IS PROXIMITY/COHESION V. FREEDOM IS SPACE TO MOVE I78
5.3.2
Change v. stability in Relationships
187
5.4
A complex case of metaphor theme interaction
192
5.5
Diversification
197
5.5.1
Diverse metaphors for emotion
197
5.5.2
Diverse metaphors for education
206
5.5.3
Summary of diversification
213
5.6
Summary of metaphorical interactions
214
Introduction to section
2
CHAPTER
6
Are metaphorical themes universal?
217
6.1
Mind, body and culture
217
6.2
Metonymy as basis of all conceptual metaphor themes
218
6.3
EMOTION IS SENSE IMPRESSION
224
6.3.1
Damasio's theory of the emotions
224
6.3.2
emotion as cause of emotion metonymy
230
6.3.3
Specific emotional/bodily responses
236
6.4
The cultural influences on emotion metaphors
243
6.4.1
Metaphor themes for anger in English
244
6.4.2
Cultural variations in metaphor themes for anger
248
6.4.3
Humoral theory and the body-cultural history debate
250
6.5
Challenges to the universality of conceptual metaphor themes
256
6.5.1
No such exact target concept exists in one culture/language as exists in an¬
other
257
6.5.2
No such exact source concept exists in one culture/language as exists in an
■
other
260
6.5.3
Target varies with the source
262
6.5.4
Sources and targets are paired differently
265
6.5.5
Different grounds or partial mapping of potential correspondences
267
6.5.6
General identity of pairing with specific differences
270
6.6
Grady,
primary metaphors and multivalency
270
6.7
Questioning the
métonymie
basis of metaphor themes
273
6.8
The body as biological or historical and cultural?
276
CHAPTER
7
Grammar, metaphor and ecology
281
7.1
Introduction
281
7.2
The noun-verb/thing-process construction
282
7.3
The typical clause and canonical events
284
7.4
Canonical events, the Newtonian world-view and industrialisation
288
7.4.1
Industrialising nature
290
7.4.2
The role of ideological metaphors in the industrialisation of nature
295
7.5
Modern scientific challenges to Newtonian dynamics
298
7.6
Congruent language and grammatical metaphor
302
7.7
Grammatical metaphors for modern science
305
7.7.1
Activation of tokens
307
7.7.2
Activation of experiences (phenomena)
307
7.7.3
Ambient structures or dummy subjects: prop it and existential there
308
7.7.4
Activation of circumstances
309
7.7.5
Creative processes and cognate objects
309
7.7.6
Reciprocal and reflexive verbs
309
7.7.7
Ergativity
310
7.7.8
Nominalization
313
7.8
Niitsi'powahsin (Blackfoot) grammar as radical metaphor
315
7.8.1
Emphasis on "verbs" in Niitsi'powahsin
317
7.8.2
"Nominalisations"
319
7.8.3
Niitsi'powahsin (Blackfoot) speakers' perspectives
320
7.9
Other relevant aspects of Blackfoot world-view
323
7.10
Possession
326
7.10.1
Action schema
327
7.10.2
Location, existence and other
schemas
327
7.10.3
Ideology and the action schema
328
7.11
Conclusion and summary: process philosophies and ideologies
330
CHAPTER
8
Capitalism and the developmentof ideological metaphors
335
8.1
Introduction
335
8.2
The ideological tradition of capitalist economic philosophy
336
8.2.1
Competition and conflict
337
8.2.2
Self-interest, individualism and the family
344
8.2.3
Man is animal
349
8.2.4
Property
351
8.2.5
Summary
357
8.2.6
Newtonian influence on economic philosophers
359
8.2.7
Man and society as machines
361
8.2.8
Quality and quantity
365
8.2.9
QUALITY IS WEALTH/MONEY
367
8.2.10
Economic virtues and time is money/commodity
373
8.2.11
Progressivism in Darwin: change
=
good
379
8.2.12
Capitalist economic philosophers, experientialism and the contemporary
theory of metaphor
380
8.3
A critique of Lakoff
s
Moral Politics
383
8.4
Reductionism or not?
388
8.4.1
Feyerabend, Prigogine and reductionism
390
8.4.2
Experiential cognitive science as reductionism
392
8.4.3
Literalisation,
reductionism and ideology
393
8.4.4
A less-reductionist model of discourse
393
8.5
Envoi: a meditation on incarnation
395
8.6
Summary and conclusion
401
Bibliography
403
Main index
415
Name and author index
45-3
Index of languages
42/
Index of metonymy themes
χ
as
γ
metaphor themes
χ
is
%
metaphor equations
χ = γ
and theme reversals
429 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Goatly, Andrew |
author_facet | Goatly, Andrew |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Goatly, Andrew |
author_variant | a g ag |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035115744 |
classification_rvk | HG 186 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)439412312 (DE-599)BVBBV035115744 |
discipline | Anglistik / Amerikanistik |
discipline_str_mv | Anglistik / Amerikanistik |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV035115744 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T22:19:31Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:22:40Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9789027227201 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016783487 |
oclc_num | 439412312 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-739 |
owner_facet | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-739 |
physical | XVI, 430 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Benjamins |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Goatly, Andrew Verfasser aut Washing the brain metaphor and hidden ideology Andrew Goatly Amsterdam [u.a.] Benjamins 2007 XVI, 430 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier sociologija kulture - literatura in ideologija - metafora Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 gnd rswk-swf Stilistik (DE-588)4116621-8 gnd rswk-swf Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd rswk-swf Linguistik (DE-588)4074250-7 gnd rswk-swf Metapher (DE-588)4038935-2 gnd rswk-swf Metapher (DE-588)4038935-2 s Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 s DE-604 Stilistik (DE-588)4116621-8 s Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 s Linguistik (DE-588)4074250-7 s b DE-604 Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016783487&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Goatly, Andrew Washing the brain metaphor and hidden ideology sociologija kulture - literatura in ideologija - metafora Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 gnd Stilistik (DE-588)4116621-8 gnd Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd Linguistik (DE-588)4074250-7 gnd Metapher (DE-588)4038935-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4077623-2 (DE-588)4116621-8 (DE-588)4014777-0 (DE-588)4074250-7 (DE-588)4038935-2 |
title | Washing the brain metaphor and hidden ideology |
title_auth | Washing the brain metaphor and hidden ideology |
title_exact_search | Washing the brain metaphor and hidden ideology |
title_exact_search_txtP | Washing the brain metaphor and hidden ideology |
title_full | Washing the brain metaphor and hidden ideology Andrew Goatly |
title_fullStr | Washing the brain metaphor and hidden ideology Andrew Goatly |
title_full_unstemmed | Washing the brain metaphor and hidden ideology Andrew Goatly |
title_short | Washing the brain |
title_sort | washing the brain metaphor and hidden ideology |
title_sub | metaphor and hidden ideology |
topic | sociologija kulture - literatura in ideologija - metafora Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 gnd Stilistik (DE-588)4116621-8 gnd Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd Linguistik (DE-588)4074250-7 gnd Metapher (DE-588)4038935-2 gnd |
topic_facet | sociologija kulture - literatura in ideologija - metafora Soziolinguistik Stilistik Englisch Linguistik Metapher |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016783487&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT goatlyandrew washingthebrainmetaphorandhiddenideology |