Publications
Publication details [#48417]
Ikegami, Yoshihiko. 2008. Subjective construal as a fashion of speaking in Japanese. In Mackenzie, J. Lachlan, María de los Ángeles Gómez-González and Elsa M. González Álvarez, eds. Current Trends in Contrastive Linguistics. Functional and cognitive perspectives. (Studies in Functional and Structural Linguistics 60). John Benjamins. pp. 227–250.
Publication type
Article in book
Publication language
English
Place, Publisher
John Benjamins
Annotation
This paper addresses the question of subjectivity in language, in particular, that aspect of subjectivity which is discussed under the rubric of ‘subjective construal’ in Cognitive Linguistics. It is argued that faced with a situation to be linguistically encoded, the speaker of any language can operate either with subjective or objective construal but that there is a marked difference among the speakers of different languages in the extent to which they indulge in subjective rather than objective construal. This is illustrated by referring to Japanese, whose speakers tend to prefer subjective construal (which results in subject-object merger), as contrasted with the speakers of English and probably of western languages in general, who apparently prefer objective construal (which results in subject-object contrast).