Article published In: Emotion, Body and Mind across a Continent: Figurative representations of emotions in Australian Aboriginal languages
Edited by Maïa Ponsonnet, Dorothea Hoffmann and Isabel O'Keeffe
[Pragmatics & Cognition 27:1] 2020
► pp. 139–183
Feeling through your chest
Body-based tropes for emotion in Anindilyakwa
Published online: 22 September 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.00013.bed
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.00013.bed
Abstract
This article explores the expression and conceptualisation of emotions
in Anindilyakwa (Gunwinyguan, north-east Arnhem Land). Fundamental to the emotional
lexicon of this language is the widespread use of body parts, which frequently occur in
figurative expressions. In this article I examine the primary body parts that occur in
emotion descriptions in both literal (physical) and figurative expressions. Particular
attention is given to yukudhukudha / -werrik- ‘chest’,
the body part conceptualised as the primary site of emotion in Anindilyakwa and the most
productive body-related morpheme used in emotion compounds. I consider the role of the
chest and other productive body parts that occur in emotion compounds, and examine the
metonymic and metaphorical devices that contribute to the expression of these emotional
states. In doing so, I propose a number of overarching and widespread tropes that hold
across different body-part compounds, and briefly contextualise these in relation to the
emotion description systems of other closely-related (Gunwinyguan) languages.
Keywords: emotion, metaphor, body, Anindilyakwa, Australian Indigenous languages
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Typological overview
- 3.Outline of the emotional lexicon of Anindilyakwa
- 4.Formal properties of emotion terms
- 4.1Noun incorporation and [bound] lexical compounds
- 4.2Emotion terms: Free and bound body part compounds
- 5.The figurative language of emotions in Anindilyakwa: Body part tropes (metaphors and
metonymies)
- 5.1The chest: The seat of emotions in Anindilyakwa
- 5.1.1physical state of the chest for emotional state metonymy
- 5.1.2chest as experiencer of emotion metonymies
- 5.1.3Metaphors
- 5.1.3.1Death/end metaphors
- 5.1.3.2Aggravated chest for conflictual emotions metaphor
- 5.1.3.3Curvature metaphors
- 5.1.3.4Weight (sadness is heavy) metaphors
- 5.1.3.5Accessibility metaphors
- 5.1.3.6(Direction & manner of) movement metaphors
- 5.1.3.7Temperature metaphors
- 5.1.4‘Chest’ summary
- 5.2Other productive body parts: The head, the brain and the heart
- 5.2.1The heart
- 5.2.2The head
- 5.2.3The brain
- 5.3A comparison of the most productive body parts: Chest, heart, head, brain
- 5.4Widespread emotion tropes
- 5.1The chest: The seat of emotions in Anindilyakwa
- 6.Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Abbreviations
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