Event Structure Metaphors through the Body

Daniel Roush
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

How do the experiences of people who have different bodies (deaf versus hearing) shape their thoughts and metaphors? Do different linguistic modes of expression (signed versus spoken) have a shaping force as well? This book investigates the metaphorical production of culturally-Deaf translators who work from English to American Sign Language (ASL). It describes how Event Structure Metaphors are handled across languages of two different modalities. Through the use of corpus-based evidence, several specific questions are addressed: are the main branches of Event Structure Metaphors – the Location and Object branches – exhibited in ASL? Are these two branches adequate to explain the event-related linguistic metaphors identified in the translation corpus? To what extent do translators maintain, shift, add, and omit expressions of these metaphors? While answering these specific questions, this book makes a significant elaboration to the two-branch theory of Event Structure Metaphors. It raises larger questions of how bilinguals handle competing conceptualizations of events and contributes to emerging interest in how body specificity, linguistic modes, and cultural context affect metaphoric variability.
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从身体看事件结构隐喻
拥有不同身体(聋人与正常人)的人的经历是如何塑造他们的思想和隐喻的?不同的语言表达方式(手语和口语)是否也有形成力?这本书调查了从英语到美国手语(ASL)工作的文化聋人翻译的隐喻生产。它描述了事件结构隐喻在两种不同的语言中是如何处理的。通过使用基于语料库的证据,解决了几个具体问题:事件结构隐喻的主要分支——位置分支和对象分支——在美国手语中表现出来了吗?这两个分支是否足以解释翻译语料库中发现的与事件相关的语言隐喻?译者在多大程度上保留、转移、增加和省略了这些隐喻的表达?在回答这些具体问题的同时,本书对事件结构隐喻的两分支理论作了重要的阐述。它提出了更大的问题,即双语者如何处理事件的竞争性概念,并有助于对身体特异性,语言模式和文化背景如何影响隐喻变异性的新兴兴趣。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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