In:Figurativity and Human Ecology
Edited by Alexandra Bagasheva, Bozhil Hristov and Nelly Tincheva
[Figurative Thought and Language 17] 2022
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 10 November 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/ftl.17.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/ftl.17.toc
Table of contents
Introduction: Figurativity in human ecology1
Alexandra Bagasheva
Bozhil Hristov
Nelly Tincheva
Part I.Resemblance and metaphor in human ecology
Linguistic and metalinguistic resemblance15
Francisco José Ruiz de Mendoza Ibáñez
María Asunción Barreras Gómez
Looking for metaphor in the natural world43
Raymond W. Gibbs
Metaphor meets narrative: Audiovisual meaning-making as embodied artistic production63
Dorothea Horst
Political speeches: Conceptual metaphor meets text worlds and gestalt psychology’s shifts
in profiling85
Nelly Tincheva
On syntactic categories and metaphors107
Milena Popova
Translation validity in metaphor theories: CMT, DMT and the Motivation & Sedimentation model123
Jordan Zlatev
Kalina Moskaluk
Part II.Emotions in human ecology
Kinaesthetic embodied schemas in emotion language: A contrastive comparison between manner-framed and path-framed
languages151
Annalisa Baicchi
What drives emotion and physiological arousal in adverts? The critical role of figurative operations181
David Houghton
Jeannette Littlemore
Samantha Ford
Ben Marder
Chelsea Harfield
Part III.Metonymy and cognitive modeling in human ecology
Metonymy in multimodal discourse, or: How metonymies get piggybacked across modalities by other metonymies
and metaphors209
Rita Brdar-Szabó
Mario Brdar
Metonymic patterns of count-to-mass and mass-to-count changes and their
implications for metonymy research251
Grzegorz Drożdż
Lexical blending in terms of cognitive modeling275
Mª Sandra Peña-Cervel
Index305
