Article published In: Review of Cognitive Linguistics
Vol. 19:2 (2021) ► pp.482–516
Red-hot faces and burnt hearts
Anger is heat metaphor from Amharic and Changana perspective
Published online: 11 October 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/rcl.00092.man
https://doi.org/10.1075/rcl.00092.man
Abstract
People from different languages draw from the knowledge they have from the domain of heat (source domain) and
apply it to the domain of anger (target domain) through metaphor. This was also found to be the case with Amharic and Changana.
Our study investigates how anger is metaphorically conceptualized in these two languages. Many similarities were found even though
variations do exist cross-linguistically. It is suggested that the similarities between these languages in conceptualizing anger
lie in the fact that human beings share the same bodily experience: (physiology) embodiment, even though
variations may arise due to the differences in cultural embodiment (race, values and geographical localization,
etc). The study seeks to demonstrate how these two dimensions contribute to the overall conceptual structure of anger is
heat metaphor in these two (unrelated) African languages.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Literature review
- 2.1The controversy: Embodiment or culture
- 2.2Comparative studies of the metaphorical conceptualization of anger
- 3.Research questions
- 4.Methodology
- 4.1Data collection
- 4.2Sample selection
- 5.Results
- 5.1The Physiological efect of an emotion stands for the emotion
- 5.1.2The range of metonymy for anger in Amharic and Changana
- 5.2anger is heat metaphor in Amharic and Changana
- 5.2.1anger is a (hot) fluid in a container
- Changana
- 5.2.2anger is fire
- Amharic
- Changana
- 5.2.1anger is a (hot) fluid in a container
- 5.3Cross-linguistic variation
- 5.3.1The heart as container for anger
- Changana
- 5.3.2The belly as the container for anger
- 5.3.3the caggwarra as (a container for) anger
- 5.3.1The heart as container for anger
- 5.1The Physiological efect of an emotion stands for the emotion
- 6.General discussion
- 7.Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Noun affix classes
- Notes
- List of abbreviations used for Amharic and Changana
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