In:Cultural Linguistics: Cultural conceptualisations and language
Farzad Sharifian †
[Cognitive Linguistic Studies in Cultural Contexts 8] 2017
► pp. xiii–xiv
Acknowledgements
Published online: 13 November 2017
https://doi.org/10.1075/clscc.8.ack
https://doi.org/10.1075/clscc.8.ack
I would like to thank Professor Roslyn M. Frank for her encouragement, support, and much appreciated advice throughout the development of the ideas and research covered in this monograph. Associate Professor Bert Peeters deserves a note of thanks for his very helpful comments and suggestions on an earlier draft. Thanks are also due to my research assistant, Marzieh Sadeghpour, for her help with designing most of the figures. I am grateful to John Benjamins Publishing Company, and in particular to Esther Roth, Acquisitions Editor, for the support provided and enthusiasm shown during the preparation of the manuscript. While some sections of it are new, the following published articles and book chapters were used, either in part or as a whole:
1.
Sharifian, F. (2008). Conceptualizations of del ‘heart-stomach’ in Persian. In F. Sharifian, R. Dirven, N. Yu, & S. Niemeier (Eds.), Culture, body, and language: Conceptualizations of internal body organs across cultures and languages (pp. 247–265). Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
2.
Sharifian, F. (2010). Cultural conceptualizations in intercultural communication: A study of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australians. Journal of Pragmatics, 42(12), 3367–3376.
3.
Sharifian, F. (2011). “They felt sorry about our Sorry”: Indigenising English by Aboriginal Australians. Asian Englishes, 14(1), 70–73.
4.
Sharifian, F. (2013). Cultural Linguistics and intercultural communication. In F. Sharifian, & M. Jamarani (Eds.), Language and intercultural communication in the New Era (pp. 60–79). London: Routledge.
5.
Sharifian, F. (2013). Globalisation and developing metacultural competence in learning English as an International Language. Multilingual Education, 3(7), 11 pp.
6.
Sharifian, F. (2014). Conceptual metaphor in intercultural communication between speakers of Aboriginal English and Australian English. In A. Musolff, F. MacArthur, & G. Pagani (Eds.), Metaphor and intercultural communication (pp. 117–130). London: Bloomsbury.
7.
Sharifian, F. (2014). Cultural schemas as ‘common ground’. In K. Burridge, & R. Benczes (Eds.), Wrestling with words and meanings: Essays in honour of Keith Allan (pp. 219–235). Clayton, VIC: Monash University Publishing.
8.
Sharifian, F. (2015). Cultural Linguistics and World Englishes. World Englishes, 34(4), 515–532.
9.
Sharifian, F. (2015). Language and culture: Overview. In F. Sharifian (Ed.), The Routledge handbook of language and culture (pp. 3–17). London: Routledge.
10.
Sharifian, F. (2016). Cultural pragmatic schemas, pragmemes, and practs: A Cultural Linguistics perspective. In K. Allan, A. Capone, & I. Kecskes (Eds.), Pragmemes and theories of language use (pp. 505–519). Cham, CH: Springer.
11.
Sharifian, F. (2017). Cultural Linguistics and linguistic relativity. Language Sciences, 59, 83–92.
12.
Sharifian, F. (2017). Cultural Linguistics: The state of the art. In F. Sharifian (Ed.), Advances in Cultural Linguistics. Singapore: Springer Nature.
All of the above were extensively revised, expanded, merged, and rewritten to form a coherent monograph. I would like to thank the publishers of these articles/book chapters for giving me the permission to reuse them. Throughout the process of writing this book, I received financial support from the Australian Research Council (ARC Discovery Project DP140100353).
