Explicating Cultural Concepts Cover Image

O eksplikowaniu konceptów kulturowych
Explicating Cultural Concepts

Author(s): Stanisława Niebrzegowska-Bartmińska
Subject(s): Sociolinguistics, Cognitive linguistics, Social Norms / Social Control
Published by: Wydział Polonistyki Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
Keywords: ethnolinguistics; concept; stereotype; cognitive definition;

Summary/Abstract: Ethnolinguistics deals with collective identities and reality-interpreting narratives. Collective identity (beliefs, values, and their symbolisations shared by a community) is defined as a mental construct, access to which can be obtained through complementary and linguistically “externalised” images. Inquiry into identity is the most effective when it is concerned with language, both in the narrower sense of linguistic structure and textual narratives, and in the broader semiotic sense. Whichever option is selected, the important issues to be addressed include the linguistic phenomena that make up identity, the methodology of identity research, as well as the data on the basis of which collective identity can be reconstructed.In this study, attention is paid to narrative linguistic phenomena: language is viewed as a most human phenomenon and a significant social fact that contributes to the construction of collective identity. The notion of “reality-interpreting narratives” pertains to subjectivised stories of the world, more or less stable judgements, stories that interpret reality and assume the shape of cognitive definitions. In the course of thirty years of work on and with the cognitive definition, two types of ethnolinguistic description have emerged: holistic (integrated) and separated (isolated). The former is preferred in the Dictionary of Folk Stereotypes and Symbols, the latter in the Axiological Lexicon of Slavs and Their Neighbours. Both types of description re-veal the functioning of images (stereotypes/concepts) in a network of relationships that allows one to capture the system of values that underlies the languages and cultures being studied. These relationships are illustrated here with the Polish images of róża‘rose’ and wolność ‘ freedom’.

  • Issue Year: 76/2021
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 401-424
  • Page Count: 24
  • Language: Polish