In:Textplicating Iconophones: Articulatory iconic action in Ulysses
Nurit Levy
[Studies in Functional and Structural Linguistics 72] 2016
► pp. v–xii
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Published online: 21 April 2016
https://doi.org/10.1075/sfsl.72.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/sfsl.72.toc
Table of contents
Acknowledgement
Symbols and Terms
Lists of Tables
PREMISES AND HYPOTHESIS
From phoneme and juncture to an hypothesis of articulatory iconic action in James Joyce’s Ulysses
Reintroducing linguistic substance
Three basic theoretical premises: The binary sign, efficiency and synergesis in language
An hypothesis of articulatory iconic relation between phoneme and text
Illustrating Ulysses from the perspective articulatory iconic action
Articulatory iconic action
From articulatory iconic action to sound symbolic phenomena
Iconic features of juncture as the method of illustration: Illustration modelled as juncture
ILLUSTRATIONS
Part I. ŋ
Chapter 1. Suggesting an invariable bias for +boundary in ŋ
Morphological Inventory
Chapter 2. n repetition + [-i]ng, identifying the scope of a larger-than-word segment: Theme boundary
Chapter 3. [-i]ng repetition in lexeme+-ing: An association between boundary and inegration in -ing. Articulatory iconic representation of theme boundary in the context of the character of Stephen Dedalus, passage- and text-scope
Part II. d
Morphological Inventory
Chapter 4. -ed repetition for theme delimitation
Chapter 5. (+/–a)d- in diaphane | adiaphane – the transparent and the opaque
Lexical Inventory
Chapter 6. [l ↔ r ↔ ]d repetition and rearrangement in lord | darl+
Part III. ʦ
Morphological Inventory
Chapter 7. An association between the distribution of ʦ and rhythmic sequencing: whores’ gets | bastards’ ghosts
Chapter 8. ʦ and the structuring of topic and comment: Sequencing-segmenting sentences
Part IV. s
Morphological Inventory
Chapter 9. The association of -ce with a bias for integration: one | once
Chapter 10. “Contraction” of a copular construct: it’s > ’s-
Lexical Inventory
Chapter 11. An association between s and text-wide integration: The case of yes
Conclusion
References
Appendix
Subject Index
Theme Index
