Article published In: The Body in Description of Emotion: Cross-linguistic studies
Edited by N.J. Enfield and Anna Wierzbicka
[Pragmatics & Cognition 10:1/2] 2002
► pp. 57–83
Colourful psi’s sleep furiously
Depicting emotional states in some African languages
Published online: 11 July 2002
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.10.1-2.04dim
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.10.1-2.04dim
This study sets out to investigate the “poetry of grammar”, more specifically the role of the body in figurative speech, in African
languages mainly belonging to Nilotic and Bantu. Apprehending the semantics and pragmatics of metaphorical and metonymic
expressions in these languages presupposes an interaction between a number of cognitive processes, as argued below. Interestingly,
these languages seem to use these strategies involving figurative speech in tandem with alternative strategies involving on-record
statements. This multivocality only makes sense if we place language and language structure more in the social world in which it
is used.
Cited by (8)
Cited by eight other publications
Ameka, Felix K.
2024. Conceptions of the make-up of a human person in Ewe. In Anthropological Linguistics [Culture and Language Use, 23], ► pp. 136 ff.
Nassenstein, Nico, Alice Mitchell & Andrea Hollington
Mensah, Eyo O. & Vivian Afi Dzokoto
Guido, Maria Grazia
Hollington, Andrea
2017. Chapter 5. Emotions in Jamaican. In Consensus and Dissent [Culture and Language Use, 19], ► pp. 81 ff.
Mietzner, Angelika
2017. Chapter 8. Emotion and society. In Consensus and Dissent [Culture and Language Use, 19], ► pp. 141 ff.
[no author supplied]
[no author supplied]
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 29 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
