Publications
Publication details [#1866]
Angelica, Julia C. 1999. The metamorphosis of metaphor: From literary trope to conceptual key. ISIS 26-27 : 209–225. 17 pp.
Publication type
Article in journal
Publication language
English
Keywords
Abstract
The study of metaphor has long been hampered by the post-Aristotelian bias that metaphor is mere poetic figurative language. Such bias has been compounded by sequential models of cognitive processes cemented into scientific (and subsequently psychological) literature. During the last decade, however, cognitive scientists have begun to re-evaluate the importance of metaphor as a key element in abstract thinking, realizing particularly the universality of the metaphoric dynamic. This focus has been further underscored by findings in cognitive neuroscience that show both that language processing involves visual, motor, auditory, and other neural systems, and that multimodal experiences related to metaphor may converge in central processing areas. Further, they have noted that, rather than being geographically localized, language processing is distributed throughout the brain. To explain this distribution, one anthropological model proposes that growing societal complexity necessitated increased linguistic development for which the brain adapted existing brain areas. Such investigative insights support the assumption that metaphor - far from being a mere literary embellishment - is in reality a key element in the cognitive inferences by which all language users interpret and cope with their experiential world.
(LLBA 2002, vol. 36, n. 2)