Emotions in Crosslinguistic Perspective ( Cognitive Linguistics Research CLR )

Publication series :Cognitive Linguistics Research CLR

Author: Jean Harkins   Anna Wierzbicka  

Publisher: De Gruyter Mouton‎

Publication year: 2001

E-ISBN: 9783110880168

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9783110170641

Subject: H0 Linguistics

Language: ENG

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Description

This volume aims to enrich the current interdisciplinary theoretical discussion of human emo-tions by presenting studies based on extensive linguistic data from a wide range of languages of the world. Each language-specific study gives detailed semantic descriptions of the meanings of culturally salient emotion words and expressions, offering fascinating insights into people's emotional lives in diverse cultures including Amharic, Chinese, German, Japanese, Lao, Malay, Mbula, Polish and Russian.

The book is unique in its emphasis on empirical language data, analyzed in a framework free of ethnocentrism and not dependent upon English emotion terms, but relying instead on independently established conceptual universals. Students of languages and cultures, psychology and cognition will find this volume a rich resource of description and analysis of emotional meanings in cultural context.

Chapter

Introduction

pp.:  7 – 41

Emotions and the nature of persons in Mbula

pp.:  75 – 121

Why Germans don't feel “anger”

pp.:  121 – 155

Linguistic evidence for a Lao perspective on facial expression of emotion

pp.:  155 – 173

Hati: A key word in the Malay vocabulary of emotion

pp.:  173 – 203

Talking about anger in Central Australia

pp.:  203 – 223

Meanings of Japanese sound-symbolic emotion words

pp.:  223 – 261

Concepts of anger in Chinese

pp.:  261 – 297

Human emotions viewed through the Russian language

pp.:  297 – 343

A culturally salient Polish emotion: Przykro (pron. pshickro)

pp.:  343 – 365

An inquiry into “sadness” in Chinese

pp.:  365 – 411

Subject and name index

pp.:  411 – 419

Words and phrases index

pp.:  419 – 429

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