Abstract
Metaphor is typically seen in relevance theory as a pragmatic phenomenon that emerges from people's striving to optimally communicate with others. Cognitive linguistics, on the other hand, has traditionally viewed metaphor as a cognitive phenomenon with verbal metaphor mostly being a surface realization of underlying conceptual metaphors. Deirdre Wilson (Intercultural Pragmatics 8: 177–196, 2011) advances earlier discussions on the similarities and differences between these two major approaches to metaphor. She suggests that conceptual metaphors may arise from verbal metaphors, and that relevance theory is especially well-suited for explaining people's context-sensitive interpretations of linguistic metaphors because of specialized inferential processes that are linked to people's communicative efforts. We describe some of the issues related to the connections between metaphoric cognition and communication, and claim that these are far more tightly coupled than is now perhaps accepted by either relevance theory or cognitive linguistics.
© 2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- An empirical demonstration of contrastive rhetoric: Preference for rhetorical structure depends on one's first language
- The individual in interaction: Why cognitive and discourse-level pragmatics need not conflict
- Knowing how and pragmatic intrusion
- Elasticity of vague language
- Coupling of metaphoric cognition and communication: A reply to Deirdre Wilson
- Book reviews
- Contributors to this issue
Articles in the same Issue
- An empirical demonstration of contrastive rhetoric: Preference for rhetorical structure depends on one's first language
- The individual in interaction: Why cognitive and discourse-level pragmatics need not conflict
- Knowing how and pragmatic intrusion
- Elasticity of vague language
- Coupling of metaphoric cognition and communication: A reply to Deirdre Wilson
- Book reviews
- Contributors to this issue