
Visual Metaphors
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Content
- Intro
- Visual Metaphors
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Table of contents
- From verbality to visuality
- References
- Theories of visual and linguistic metaphor
- Visual metaphor in extended conceptual metaphor theory
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Two kinds of visual metaphors
- 2.1Correlation-based visual metaphors in the real world
- 2.2Resemblance-based visual metaphors in the real world
- 3.How some new extensions of CMT apply to visual metaphors
- 3.1Extended CMT and the analysis of a painting
- 3.1.1Complex abstract system
- 3.1.2Abstract movement
- 4.Conclusions
- References
- Uncanny resemblance. Words, pictures, and conceptual representations in the field of metaphor
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Visual metaphors as elliptic syllogisms
- 3.The relationship between the picture-maker and the viewer
- 4.Visual perception and mental imagery
- 5.Invariance Principle, occlusion shape and occlusion size
- 6.Aesthetically relevant properties represented by mental imagery
- 7.Imagery view of visual metaphors
- 8.Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- The visuality of metaphors. A formalist ontology of metaphors
- 1.Two models after the linguistic turn
- 1.ASemantic model
- 1.BInternalist model
- 2.Problems in the internalist-conceptual model
- 3.Ontology
- References
- Applications of visual and linguistic metaphor
- Visual and multimodal interaction of metaphor and metonymy. A study of Iranian and Dutch print advertisements
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Conceptual metonymy
- 3.Types of metonymy
- 3.1Source-in-target
- 3.2Target-in-source
- 4.Metaphor and metonymy in interaction
- 4.1Metonymic expansion of a metaphoric source
- 4.2Metonymic expansion of a metaphoric target
- 4.3Metonymic reduction of a metaphoric source
- 4.4Metonymic reduction of a metaphoric target
- 5.Metonymic complexes
- 5.1Double domain expansion
- 5.2Double domain reduction
- 5.3Domain expansion plus domain reduction
- 5.4Domain reduction plus domain expansion
- 6.Conclusions
- References
- Poetic and visual metaphors in Hungarian folklore
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Metaphors of love in Hungarian folk songs
- 3.Shared conceptual background of a folk song and a hope chest
- 3.1A folk song about love and marriage
- 3.2Metaphors of a hope chest
- 3.2.1Metaphors within a hope chest as a three-dimensional object
- 3.2.2Metaphors within the decorations of a hope chest
- 3.2.3Metaphors based on the functional use of a hope chest
- 4.Conclusion
- References
- Visual metaphor and its narrative function. Jacek Malczewski's parabolic painting
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Metaphors which we perceive and embrace
- 3.Perceptual metaphors in fine arts: Their structure and functions
- 4.Narrative perceptual metaphors and possible worlds
- 5.Time structure of painting works
- 6.Narrative minds in possible worlds of art
- 7.Jacek Malczewski and narrative pictorial metaphors
- Conclusion
- References
- Image metaphors of Trianon
- 1.Introduction
- 1.1The Treaty of Trianon
- 1.2Research questions and hypotheses
- 1.3Conceptual, cultural, linguistic, and image metaphors
- 1.4Corpus
- 1.5Methodology
- 2.Analysis of the figures
- 2.1 Figure 1
- 2.1.1Description
- 2.1.2Interpretation
- 2.1.3Conceptual processes
- 2.2 Figure 2
- 2.2.1Description
- 2.2.2Interpretation
- 2.2.3Conceptual processes
- 2.3 Figure 3
- 2.3.1Description
- 2.3.2Interpretation
- 2.3.3Conceptual processes
- 2.4 Figure 4
- 2.4.1Description
- 2.4.2Interpretation
- 2.4.3Conceptual processes
- 2.5 Figure 5
- 2.5.1Description
- 2.5.2Interpretation
- 2.5.3Conceptual processes
- 2.6 Figure 6
- 2.6.1Description
- 2.6.2Interpretation
- 2.6.3Conceptual processes
- 3.7 Figure 7
- 3.7.1Description
- 3.7.2Interpretation
- 3.7.3Conceptual processes
- 2.8 Figure 8
- 2.8.1Description
- 2.8.2Interpretation
- 2.8.3Conceptual processes
- 3.Discussion
- 4.Conclusion
- References
- Rendering, generalization and variation. On the use of multiple parallel texts as a comparative method in cognitive poetics
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Data and method
- 3.How the systems are similar
- 4.When the systems differ: Flexibility and irreducible difference
- 4.1Multiple parallel texts as a window to human cognitive flexibility
- 4.2Diachrony in multiple parallel texts as a key to identifying an irreducible difference between languages
- 5.Towards the use of multiple parallel texts as a method in comparative cognitive poetics
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix 1.The Garden of Live Flowers, translations
- Appendix 2.Abbreviations used
- Multimodal conceptual patterns of Hungary in political cartoons
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Theoretical insights
- 2.1Political cartoon as a genre
- 2.2Relationship of verbal and visual elements in political cartoons
- 2.3Metaphtonymy
- 2.4Methodology
- 3.Corpus-related multimodal structures
- 3.1Metaphoric scenario vs. metaphtonymy scenario
- 3.2Hungary is an object
- 3.3Hungary is a person
- 4.Corpus analysis
- 5.Multimodal conceptual patterns in the corpus
- 6.Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Viewpoint and metaphor in culture. A Cognitive Linguistic analysis on a selection of Chinese eulogistic idioms used in Taiwan
- 1.Language of death as a cultural product
- 2.Metaphor and viewpoint in discourse
- 3.Previous studies of the cultural conceptualization of death and Chinese funeral discourse
- 4.Data and method
- 5.Mandarin eulogistic idioms for teachers, media workers and legal experts
- 5.1Ritual idioms used in funerals of teachers (? ?
- 5.2Ritual idioms used in funerals of media workers (? ?
- 5.3Ritual idioms used in funerals of legal experts (???
- 6.When the mourner becomes the object of conceptualization
- 7.Culture in discourse and vice versa: What Cognitive Linguistics can reveal about occupations in society
- Acknowledgements
- Glossary
- References
- Appendix.Eulogistic idioms in the online request system analyzed
- Subject index
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