Publication : Anna Rogos-Hebda et Heli Tissari (dir.)”At the Crossroads of Historical and Cognitive Linguistics”, John Benjamins

Publication : Anna Rogos-Hebda et Heli Tissari (dir.)”At the Crossroads of Historical and Cognitive Linguistics”, John Benjamins

At the Crossroads of Historical and Cognitive Linguistics

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ISBN 9789027232113| EUR 130.00 | USD 169.00

ISBN 9789027244239| EUR 130.00 | USD 169.00

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This volume explores the synergy between historical and cognitive linguistics, demonstrating how the two can jointly shed light on patterns of language change. Focusing on figurative language, particularly metaphor and metonymy, it features a range of case studies that zoom in on the emergence and evolution of meaning across time, with chapters addressing, among other topics, diachronic changes in the semantics of nouns (e.g. for emotions) and speech act verbs. Beyond lexical and grammatical change, the volume engages with broader issues such as belief systems, the conceptualization of the future, intersubjectification, etymology, and prototype theory. The contributors employ a variety of theoretical and methodological frameworks, including diachronic morphology, cultural history, and both exploratory and confirmatory statistics. Together, these studies exemplify the potential of interdisciplinary approaches and invite further dialogue on the tools and theories suited to tracing the evolution of figurative thought and language over time.
[Figurative Thought and Language, 21] 2026.  vii, 288 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 29 January 2026

TABLE OF CONTENTS
  • Prefacepp. vii–viii
  • Introduction: At the crossroads of historical and cognitive linguisticspp. 1–10
    • SECTION 1. WHY HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS AND COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS NEED EACH OTHER
  • At the intersection: Historical and cognitive linguistics
    Margaret E. Winterspp. 12–31
  • Mirrors between historical and cognitive linguistics in figurative origins
    Richard Trimpp. 32–49
  • Cognitive and historical concepts of the “career of metaphor”: The case of parasite
    Andreas Musolffpp. 50–66
    • SECTION 2. METAPHOR AND GRAMMATICALIZATION
  • Lexicalization and grammaticalization: An integrated cognitive linguistic and historical linguistic approach to language change
    Gábor Győripp. 68–91
  • Speech verbs, figuration and the English Caused-Motion construction in American English
    Juan G. Vázquez-Gonzálezpp. 92–121
  • Prototypes, (inter)subjectification, figurativity and semantic change: Evidence from Portuguese
    Augusto Soares da Silvapp. 122–146
    • SECTION 3. METAPHOR AND CULTURE
  • heart and soul as a locus of vision: A comparative analysis of kardía and psuchḗ’s metaphoricity in Ancient Greek
    Georgios Ioannoupp. 148–177
  • “And who by fire, who by water…”: On the “good” refugees and “bad” (economic) migrants in early American magazines
    Anna Rogos-Hebdapp. 178–199
  • A love story: A culturally informed diachronic account of love metaphors between Latin and Italian
    Francesca Strik-Lievers and Chiara Fedrianipp. 200–221
  • Changes in the conceptualization of “face” in Polish from the 19th century to the present day
    Magdalena Zawisławska and Magdalena Derwojedowapp. 222–242
    • SECTION 4. METAPHOR ACROSS TIME AND CONTEXT
  • Contextual use of “journey” may communicate specific experience and concerns of a social group
    Jane Dilkespp. 244–263
  • Using The Oxford English Dictionary to identify metaphors in historical corpus data
    Heli Tissaripp. 264–285
  • Indexpp. 287–288