This new addition to Routledge's Major Works series, Critical
Concepts in Linguistics, brings together the very best and most
influential scholarly research on cognitive linguistics. Cognitive
Linguistics is a broad approach to language that places
psychological reality at the top of the list of theoretical
desiderata. Both experimental and theoretical work will be included
in each volume. The fact that language is a system of communication
is emphasized, so that explanations that rely on the functions of
linguistic elements are preferred over purely syntactic accounts.
The label, "Cognitive Linguistics," arose in the 1980s with
Langacker, Lakoff, Fillmore, and Talmy laying the
semantic/pragmatic foundations for the approach. Volume I will be
dedicated to key works by these authors and others. Volume II
further explores semantic foundations with papers on metaphor,
blending and embodiment. Cognitive Linguistics encompasses
approaches to phonology, morphology, grammar, and discourse, but
the emphasis has been on morphology and grammar. Work has coalesced
around the idea that form-function pairings (constructions,
schemata) are the basic units of language. Volumes III and IV
include seminal works in this area. A strength of Cognitive
Linguistics is that it interfaces naturally with a great deal of
work in language acquisition, language evolution, and language
change. Selected papers from these topics that make explicit use of
key ideas in Cognitive Linguistics will be included in Volume V.
With a new introduction by the editor and a comprehensive index,
this five volume collection will be a convenient and authoritative
reference resource on cognitive linguistics for both student and
scholar.
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