Review published In:
Metaphor and the Social World
Vol. 12:2 (2022) ► pp.340347
References (18)
References
Cameron, L. (1999). Operationalizing ‘metaphor’ for applied linguistic research. In L. Cameron & G. Low (Eds.), Researching and applying metaphor (pp. 3–28). Cambridge University Press. Error! Hyperlink reference not valid. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Cienki, A. (1998). Metaphoric gestures and some of their relations to verbal metaphoric expressions. In J.-P. Koenig (Ed.). Discourse and cognition: Bridging the gap (pp. 189–204). Center for the Study of Language and Information.Google Scholar
(2008). Why study metaphor and gesture? In A. Cienki & C. Müller (Eds.) Metaphor and gesture (pp.5–25). John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2017). Analysing metaphor in gesture: A set of metaphor identification guidelines for gesture (MIG-G). In E. Semino & Z. Demjén (Eds.), The Routledge handbook of metaphor and language (pp. 131–147). Routledge.Google Scholar
Egg, M. (2016). Spatial metaphor in the Pauline epistles. In F. Horn & C. Breytenbach (Eds.), Spatial metaphors. Texts and transformations (pp.77–99). Edition Topoi.Google Scholar
Gibbs, R. W. (2011). Are ‘deliberate’ metaphors really deliberate? A question of human consciousness and action. Metaphor and the Social World, 1 (1), 26–52. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Herrmann, J. B. (2013). Metaphor in academic discourse: Linguistic forms, conceptual structures, communicative functions and cognitive presentations (Dissertation Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam). LOT.
Lakoff, G. & Turner, M. (1989). More than cool reason. A field guide to poetic metaphor. The University of Chicago Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Müller, C. (2008). Metaphors dead and alive, sleeping and waking. A dynamic view. University of Chicago Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Nacey, S., Dorst, A. G., Krennmayr, T. & Reijnierse, W. G. (2019). Metaphor identification in multiple languages: MIPVU around the world. John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Nisbet, R. (1982). Prejudices: A philosophical dictionary. Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Reijnierse, W. G. (2017). The value of deliberate metaphor (Dissertation Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam). LOT.
Reijnierse, W. G., Burgers, C. H., Krennmayr, T., Steen, G. J. (2018). DMIP: A method for identifying potentially deliberate metaphor in language use. Corpus Pragmatics, 2 1, 129–147. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Schklowski, V. (1971). Kunst als Verfahren. In J. Streidter (Ed.) Russischer Formalismus. Texte zur allgemeinen Literaturtheorie und zur Theory der Prosa. (pp. 3–35). Fink.Google Scholar
Steen, G. (2011a). From three dimensions to five steps: The value of deliberate metaphor. Metaphorik.de, 21 1, 83–10.Google Scholar
(2011b). What does ‘really deliberate’ really mean? More thoughts on metaphor and consciousness and actions. Metaphor and the Social World, 1 (1), 53–56. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Steen, G., Dorst, A. G., Herrmann, J. B., Kaal, A. A., Krennmayr, T. & âsma, T. (2010). A method for linguistic metaphor identification (converging evidence in language and communication research 14). John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Wallington, A. M., J. A. Barnden, M. A. Barnden, F. J. Ferguson & S. F. Glasbey. (2003). Metaphoricity signals: A corpus-based investigation. Cognitive science research papers. [URL] (accessed 8 April 2022).