A Grammar of Iconism

前表紙
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1998 - 399 ページ
Literary criticism often includes ad hoc comments about onomatopoeia, synaesthesia, or other forms of iconism. In A Grammar of Iconism, Earl Anderson discusses these phenomena systematically. According to Anderson, modern post-Saussurian linguistics has as its central tenet the arbitrariness of linguistic signs. Thus, linguistic elements that bear some relationship to their referent have been seen as marginal to the system of language, or at best similar in their arbitrariness to other linguistic signs. As an example of the latter, while most languages have an onomatopoeic element, different languages imitate sounds differently. Anderson argues against the standard view, provides a detailed critique of the negative arguments against iconism, and offers a positive typology that demonstrates the extensiveness and complexity of iconism in language.

この書籍内から

目次

Acknowledgments
9
Syntactic Iconism
265
Inspiration Intentionality and Stylistic Differentiation
314
著作権

他の 3 セクションは表示されていません

他の版 - すべて表示

多く使われている語句

書誌情報