In:Metaphor across Time and Conceptual Space: The interplay of embodiment and cultural models
James J. Mischler, III
[Cognitive Linguistic Studies in Cultural Contexts 3] 2013
► pp. v–xiv
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This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 18 September 2013
https://doi.org/10.1075/clscc.3.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/clscc.3.toc
Table of contents
Tables and figures
Part I. Theoretical foundations
Chapter 1. The Cognition-Culture interface
Chapter 2. Diachronic aspects of synchronic concepts
Chapter 3. Metaphor across historical time
Part II. A macro-study of human emotion in cultural context, A.D. 1500–1990
Chapter 4. Research questions and methodology
Chapter 5. Results of the ancillary study
of non-linguistic data
Chapter 6. The main study of two diachronic metaphors of anger
Part III. Micro-studies of emotion – the 19th century
Chapter 7. The edge of anger: The spleen metaphor across emotion domains
Chapter 8. Bubbling happiness: Properties of emotion
Part IV. Conclusions and implications
Chapter 9. The non-autonomous nature of cognition, language, and culture
Epilogue. “Bridging the Gap” between theory and real-world language use
References. The historical Four Humors texts with brief annotations
Appendices
Index
