Review published In:
Gesture
Vol. 21:2/3 (2022) ► pp.374381
References (27)
References
Cienki, A. (2012). Usage events of spoken language and the symbolic units (may) abstract from them. In Krzysztof Kosecki & Janusz Badio (eds.), Cognitive Processes in Language, 149–158. Frankfurt: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
(2013). Gesture, space, grammar, and cognition. Space in Language and Linguistics: Geographical, Interactional, and Cognitive Perspectives. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. 667–686. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2017). Utterance Construction Grammar (UCxG) and the variable multimodality of constructions. Linguistics Vanguard, 3(s1): 20160048. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Evans, V. (2019). Cognitive Linguistics: A Complete Guide. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Fricke, E. (2012). Grammatik multimodal: Wie Wörter und Gesten zusammenwirken. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Harrison, S. (2010). Evidence for node and scope of negation in coverbal gesture. Gesture 10(1). 29–51. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2018). The Impulse to Gesture-Where Language, Minds, and Bodies Intersect. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Hoffmann, T. (2017). Multimodal constructs-multimodal constructions? The role of constructions in the working memory. Linguistics Vanguard, 3(s1): 20160042. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kendon, A. (2004). Gesture: Visible Action as Utterance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kipp, M. (2004). Gesture Generation by Imitation: From Human Behavior to Computer Character Animation. Boca Raton, Florida.: Dissertation.com.
Kok, K. I. & A. Cienki. (2016). Cognitive Grammar and gesture: Points of convergence, advances and challenges. Cognitive Linguistics, 27(1): 67–100. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Ladewig, H. (2020). Integrating Gestures: The Dimension of Multimodality in Cognitive Grammar. Berlin/Boston: Walter de Gruyter GmbH. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Lakoff, G. (1990). The invariance hypothesis: Is abstract reason based on image schemas? Cognitive Linguistics, 1(1): 39–74. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Langacker, R. W. (1993). Reference-point constructions[J], Cognitive Linguistics, 41,1–38. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(1999). Assessing the cognitive linguistic enterprise. In T. Janssen and G. Redeker (Eds), Cognitive Linguistics: Foundations, Scope, and Methodology, pp. 13–60. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
McNeill, D. (1992). Hand and Mind: What Gestures Reveal about Thought. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
(2005). Gesture and Thought. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Mittelberg, I. (2017). Multimodal existential constructions in German: Manual actions of giving as experiential substrate for grammatical and gestural patterns. Linguistics Vanguard, 3(s1): 20160047. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Müller, C. (1998). Beredte Hände. Theorie und Sprachvergleich redebegleitender Gesten. In Thomas Noll & Caroline Schmauser (eds.), Körperbewegungen und ihre Bedeutung, 21–44. Berlin: Arno Spitz.Google Scholar
Murphy, G. L. (1996). On metaphoric representation. Cognition, 60(2),173–204. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Schoonjans, S. (2017). Multimodal Construction Grammar issues are Construction Grammar issues, Linguistics Vanguard, 3(s1): 20160050. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Talmy, L. (1983). How language structures space. In Herbert L. Pick & Linda P. Acredolo (eds.), Spatial Orientation: Theory, Research, and Application, 225–282. New York: Plenum Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2000). Toward a Cognitive Semantics. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Wilcox, S., & Xavier, A. N. (2013). A framework for unifying spoken language signed language, and gesture. Todas as Letras-Revista de Língua e Literatura, 151, 88–110.Google Scholar
Zima, E. (2017). On the multimodality of [all the way from X PREP Y]. Linguistics Vanguard, 3(s1): 20160055. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Zima, E. & A. Bergs. (2017). Multimodality and construction grammar. Linguistics Vanguard, 3(s1): 20161006. DOI logoGoogle Scholar