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. 341–367
Body and emotion
Body parts in Chinese expression of emotion
Published online: 11 July 2002
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.10.1-2.14yu
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.10.1-2.14yu
This study presents a semantic analysis of how emotions and emotional experiences are described in Chinese. It focuses on
conventionalized expressions in Chinese, namely compounds and idioms, which contain body-part terms. The body-part terms are
divided into two classes: those denoting external body parts and those denoting internal body parts or organs. It is found that,
with a few exceptions, the expressions involving external body parts are originally metonymic, describing emotions in terms of
their externally observable bodily events and processes. However, once conventionalized, these expressions are also used
metaphorically regardless of emotional symptoms or gestures. The expressions involving internal organs evoke imaginary bodily
images that are primarily metaphorical. It is found that the metaphors, though imaginary in nature, are not really all arbitrary.
They seem to have a bodily or psychological basis, although they are inevitably influenced by cultural models.
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