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2 What is cognitive ethnolinguistics?
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Jerzy Bartmiński
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgements vii
- Original sources of papers vii
- Key to questionnaires viii
- 1 The Ethnolinguistic School of Lublin and Anglo-American cognitive linguistics 1
- 2 What is cognitive ethnolinguistics? 6
- 3 Linguistic worldview and how to reconstruct it 22
- 4 Values as the foundation of linguistic worldview 38
- 5 The stereotype as an object of linguistic description 50
- 6 The ‘cognitive definition’ in the description of stereotypes 67
- 7 Viewpoint, perspective, and linguistic worldview 76
- 8 Profiling and the subject-oriented interpretation of the world 88
- 9 The subject’s viewpoint(s) in language, text, and discourse 95
- 10 The stereotype of the sun in folk Polish 120
- 11 The Polish stereotype of the mother: towards a cognitive definition 132
- 12 The Polish DOM (house/home) in its physical, social, and cultural aspects 149
- 13 The Polish OJCZYZNA (homeland): its base stereotype and ideological profiles 162
- 14 Changes in the Polish stereotype of ‘a German’ 178
- 15 Prawica ‘right wing’ and lewica ‘left wing’: profiles in contemporary discourse 199
- 16 Varieties of fate: the Polish los and dola; the Russian sud’ba 204
- 17 The conception of the linguistic worldview in comparative research 213
- Afterword 222
- References 224
- Index 244
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgements vii
- Original sources of papers vii
- Key to questionnaires viii
- 1 The Ethnolinguistic School of Lublin and Anglo-American cognitive linguistics 1
- 2 What is cognitive ethnolinguistics? 6
- 3 Linguistic worldview and how to reconstruct it 22
- 4 Values as the foundation of linguistic worldview 38
- 5 The stereotype as an object of linguistic description 50
- 6 The ‘cognitive definition’ in the description of stereotypes 67
- 7 Viewpoint, perspective, and linguistic worldview 76
- 8 Profiling and the subject-oriented interpretation of the world 88
- 9 The subject’s viewpoint(s) in language, text, and discourse 95
- 10 The stereotype of the sun in folk Polish 120
- 11 The Polish stereotype of the mother: towards a cognitive definition 132
- 12 The Polish DOM (house/home) in its physical, social, and cultural aspects 149
- 13 The Polish OJCZYZNA (homeland): its base stereotype and ideological profiles 162
- 14 Changes in the Polish stereotype of ‘a German’ 178
- 15 Prawica ‘right wing’ and lewica ‘left wing’: profiles in contemporary discourse 199
- 16 Varieties of fate: the Polish los and dola; the Russian sud’ba 204
- 17 The conception of the linguistic worldview in comparative research 213
- Afterword 222
- References 224
- Index 244