いくつかの文献は電子書籍化されていたり、CD-ROM販売されていたりします。
※A Glossary of Cognitive Linguistics や The MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences など
PDFの構成は以下のようになっています。
【目次】
FOUNDATIONAL WORKS
TEXTBOOKS
GLOSSARY
REFERENCE RESOURCES
BIBLIOGRAPHIES
EDITED COLLECTIONS
JOURNALS
COGNITIVE GRAMMAR
CONSTRUCTION GRAMMAR
CONCEPTUAL INTEGRATION THEORY
CONCEPTUAL METAPHOR THEORY
FRAME SEMANTICS
IMAGE SCHEMA THEORY
LCCM THEORY [The Theory of Lexical Concepts and Cognitive Models]
MENTAL SPACES THEORY
PROTOTYPE THEORY
USAGE-BASED APPROACHES TO LANGUAGE LEARNING ]]>『認知文法論序説』(ラネカー)http://editech.exblog.jp/16144127/2011-04-04T17:55:00+09:002011-04-04T17:56:04+09:002011-04-04T17:55:41+09:00editech認知言語学
Cognitive Grammar: A Basic Introduction
ロナルド・W・ラネカー(Ronald W. Langacker)著、山梨正明 監訳、研究社
A5判 上製 800(予)頁/予価8,400円(本体8,000円+税)
ISBN 978-4327401580
2011年5月20日発売予定
http://www.kenkyusha.co.jp/purec/
認知言語学の草創期から現在に至るまで研究の第一線で活躍し、生成文法の強力なオールタナティヴを提案してきたロナルド・ラネカー。本書は、大部かつ難解な著作で知られるラネカーが2008年に発表した Cognitive Grammar: A Basic Introduction を翻訳したものである。単著の翻訳としては本邦初、日本人研究者待望の一冊である。
【目次】
第1講 認知言語学の考え方(1):基本的な認知能力
第2講 認知言語学の考え方(2):経験の重視
第3講 カテゴリー化とプロトタイプ
第4講 同じ物事に対する異なる捉え方
第5講 メタファー
第6講 メトニミー
第7講 主体化
第8講 経験基盤主義:身体性
第9講 意味と認知領域
第10講 イメージスキーマ
第11講 フレーム
第12講 百科事典的意味
第13講 使用依拠モデル
第14講 認知言語学の位置づけ
問題のヒント
あとがき
索引
]]>『Investigations in Cognitive Grammar』(Langacker)http://editech.exblog.jp/14886256/2010-08-03T09:41:00+09:002010-08-03T09:43:36+09:002010-08-03T09:42:00+09:00editech認知言語学
Investigations in Cognitive Grammar
by Ronald W. Langacker
Series: Mouton Select
Walter de Gruyter, 2010
ISBN 978-3-11-021435-2 Paperback $39.95
http://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/3110214350/
[ About this Title ]
This volume makes accessible a substantial range of recent research in Cognitive Grammar. From disparate sources, it brings together a dozen innovative papers, revised and integrated to form a coherent whole. This work continues the ongoing program of progressively articulating the theoretical framework and showing its descriptive application to varied grammatical phenomena.
A number of major topics are examined in depth through multiple chapters viewing them from different perspectives: grammatical constructions (their general nature, their metonymic basis, their role in grammaticization), nominal grounding (quantifiers, possessives, impersonal it), clausal grounding (its relation to nominal grounding, an epistemic account of tense, a systemic view of the English auxiliary), the "control cycle" (an abstract cognitive model with many linguistic manifestations), finite clauses (their internal structure and external grammar), and complex sentences (complementation, subordination, coordination). In each case the presentation builds from fundamentals and introduces the background needed for comprehension. At the same time, by bringing fresh approaches and new descriptive insights to classic problems, it represents a significant advance in understanding grammar and indicates future directions of theory and research in the Cognitive Grammar framework.
The book is of great interest to students and practitioners of cognitive linguistics and to scholars in related areas.
Chapter 2 Metonymy in grammar [40]
1. Indeterminacy
2. Active zones
3. Reference point constructions
4. Complex things and relationships
5. Other phenomena
Chapter 3 A Constructional approach to grammaticization [60]
1. The source construction
2. Component meanings
3. Integration
4. The indefinite article
5. Restructuring
Chapter 4 Possession, location, and existence [81]
1. What is “possession”?
2. Possessive grounding
3. Nominal and clausal possession
4. have possessives
5. be possessives
6. Diachronic perspective
Chapter 5 On the subject of impersonals [109]
1. The problem
2. Alternations in focal prominence
2.1. Basic grammatical notions
2.2. Actor defocusing
2.3. Non-participant trajectors
3. The specification of nominal referents
3.1. Nominal organization
3.2. Definites
3.3. Delimitation
3.4. Definite impersonals
3.5. Vagueness
4. The control cycle
4.1. The general model
4.2. Epistemic level
5. What does it mean?
5.1. Putting the pieces together
5.2. Reconciliation
6. Impersonal constructions
7. Further prospects
Chapter 6 Enunciating the parallelism of nominal and clausal grounding [148]
1. What is at issue?
2. Control
3. (Inter)Action
4. Statements and levels of reality
5. Clausal grounding
6. Grounding and discourse
7. Nominal grounding: Effective level
8. Nominal grounding: Epistemic level
9. Grounding quantifiers
Chapter 7 The English present: Temporal coincidence vs. epistemic immediacy [185]
1. Framing the issue
2. Temporal coincidence
2.1. Present perfectives
2.2. Non-present uses
3. Epistemic immediacy
3.1. General considerations
3.2. An epistemic model
3.3. Non-modal clauses
4. Modals
5. Summing up
Chapter 8 A functional account of the English auxiliary [219]
1. The formalist account
2. Functions and systems
3. Global organization
3.1. Nominals and finite clauses
3.2. Grounding and grounded structure
3.3. Existential verbs
3.4. The interactive system
3.5. Levels of clausal organization
4. Basic clauses
4.1. The grounded structure
4.2. The grounding system
4.3. The role of do
5. Interaction
5.1. Existential verb
5.2. Existential core
5.3. Layering
5.4. Anchoring
5.5. Inversion
5.6. Questions
Chapter 9 Aspects of the grammar of finite clauses [259]
1. Finite clauses and the control cycle
2. The virtuality of clausal grounding
3. Finite clause complements
4. Factivity
5. Impersonals
Chapter 10 Finite complements in English [290]
1. Conceptions of reality
2. Grammatical marking
3. Cognitive models
4. Personal predicates
5. Impersonal predicates
Chapter 11 Subordination in Cognitive Grammar [327]
1. Sources of asymmetry
2. Constituency and profiling
3. An alternative account
4. Broader issues
Chapter 12 The conceptual basis of coordination [341]
1. Prerequisites
1.1. Conceptual semantics
1.2. Symbolic grammar
2. Conjunction and/or disjunction
2.1. and
2.2. or
3. Basic coordination
4. Complex constructions
4.1. Non-constituent coordination
4.2. Discontinuity
5. Final word
References [375]
Author index [389]
Subject index [391]
[ Publication Sources ]
Chapter 1. Constructions in Cognitive Grammar
2003 English Linguistics 20, 41–83.
Chapter 2. Metonymy in grammar
2004 Journal of Foreign Languages 6, 2–24.
Chapter 3. A constructional approach to grammaticization
To appear Linguistics. Special issue. Guest editors: Suzanne Kemmer and Martin Hilpert
Chapter 4. Possession, location, and existence
2004 In Augusto Soares da Silva, Amadeu Torres, and Miguel Gonçalves (eds.),
Linguagem, Cultura e Cognição: Estudos de Linguística Cognitiva, vol. 1, 85–120
Coimbra: Livraria Almedina.
Chapter 5. On the subject of impersonals
To appear In Mario Brdar, Milena Zic Fuchs, and Stefan Th. Gries (eds.),
Converging and Diverging Trends in Cognitive Linguistics. Amsterdam/
Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Chapter 6. Enunciating the parallelism of nominal and clausal grounding
2008 In Jean-Rémi Lapaire, Guillaume Desagulier, and Jean-Baptiste Guignard (eds.),
Du Fait Grammatical au Fait Cognitif [From Gram to Mind: Grammar as Cognition],
17–65. Pessac: Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux.
Chapter 7. The English present: Temporal coincidence vs. epistemic immediacy
To appear In Frank Brisard (ed.), Cognitive Linguistic Approaches to Tense
and Aspect. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Chapter 8. A functional account of the English auxiliary
Original paper.
Chapter 9. Aspects of the grammar of finite clauses
2004 In Michel Achard and Suzanne Kemmer (eds.), Language, Culture and Mind,
535–577. Stanford: CSLI Publications.
Chapter 10. Finite complements in English
2008 Journal of Foreign Languages 10, 2–35.
Chapter 11. Subordination in Cognitive Grammar
2008 In Barbara Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk (ed.), Asymmetric Events, 137–149.
Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Chapter 12. The conceptual basis of coordination
To appear In Seana Coulson (ed.), Language in Action. Stanford: CSLI]]>『言語運用のダイナミズム――認知語用論のアプローチ』http://editech.exblog.jp/14653664/2010-06-25T03:20:20+09:002010-06-25T03:20:15+09:002010-06-25T03:20:15+09:00editech認知言語学
<講座 認知言語学のフロンティア>第4巻
『言語運用のダイナミズム――認知語用論のアプローチ』
崎田智子、岡本雅史 著、山梨正明 編、研究社、2010/06
A5判 並製 274頁 本体3000円 ISBN 978-4-327-23704-2
http://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/4327237043/
第6章 総括と展望]]>『コーパスを活用した認知言語学』http://editech.exblog.jp/14616651/2010-06-19T10:16:20+09:002010-06-19T10:16:18+09:002010-06-19T10:16:18+09:00editech認知言語学
コーパスを活用した認知言語学
アリス・ダイグナン著、大森文子[他]訳、大修館書店、2010/07
A5 336頁 2,800円 ISBN: 978-4-469-21329-4
認知言語学の理論に基づき、人間の思考と言語の本質を解き明かす鍵となる比喩表現をコーパスを活用しながら分析・解説。]]>『The Expression of Negation』http://editech.exblog.jp/14522715/2010-06-04T23:31:00+09:002010-06-04T23:32:38+09:002010-06-04T23:31:08+09:00editech書籍・雑誌
The Expression of Negation
Ed. by Horn, Laurence R., Walter de Gruyter, 2010
Series: The Expression of Cognitive Categories [ECC]
23 x 15.5 cm, vi, 343 pages, ISBN 978-3-11-021930-2
RRP € 99.95 / *US$ 140.00
http://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/3110219298/
【About this Title】
Negation is a sine qua non of every human language but is absent from otherwise complex systems of animal communication. In many ways, it is negation that makes us human, imbuing us with the capacity to deny, to contradict, to misrepresent, to lie, and to convey irony. The apparent simplicity of logical negation as a one-place operator that toggles truth and falsity belies the intricate complexity of the expression of negation in natural language. Not only do we find negative adverbs, verbs, copulas, quantifiers, and affixes, but the interaction of negation with other operators (including multiple iterations of negation itself) can be exceedingly complex to describe, extending (as first detailed by Otto Jespersen) to negative concord, negative incorporation, and the widespread occurrence of negative polarity items whose distribution is subject to principles of syntax, semantics, and pragmatics. The chapters in this book survey the patterning of negative utterances in natural languages, spanning such foundational issues as how negative sentences are realized cross-linguistically and how that realization tends to change over time, how negation is acquired by children, how it is processed by adults, and how its expression changes over time. Specific chapters offer focused empirical studies of negative polarity, pleonastic negation, and negative/quantifier scope interaction, as well as detailed examinations of the form and function of sentential negation in modern Romance languages and Classical Japanese.
]]>『デザイン言語 入門』http://editech.exblog.jp/14463526/2010-05-27T01:47:44+09:002010-05-27T01:47:42+09:002010-05-27T01:47:42+09:00editech書籍・雑誌
『デザイン言語 入門──モノと情報を結ぶデザインのために知っておきたいこと』
脇田 玲 著、 慶應義塾大学出版会、2009/11
四六判/上製/154頁 本体1800円
ISBN-10: 4766416929 ISBN-13: 978-4766416923
http://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/4766416929/
http://www.keio-up.co.jp/kup/sp/design/
特集 私の日本語学概説
○記述文法に基づいた日本語学概説(野田春美)
○認知言語学から見た日本語(籾山洋介)
○日本語の基本構造(上山あゆみ)
○私の日本語学概説 -古典語研究の立場から-(高山善行)
○日本語教育のための日本語学概説(山内博之)
○国語教育と日本語学(森山卓郎)
]]>『Language, Usage and Cognition』(Bybee)http://editech.exblog.jp/14066454/2010-03-31T17:20:00+09:002010-03-31T17:33:06+09:002010-03-31T17:20:06+09:00editech書籍・雑誌
Language, Usage and Cognition
by Joan Bybee (University of New Mexico)
Cambridge university Press, July 2010
ISBN-13: 9780521616836 262 pages, US $39.99
http://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/0521616832/
【内容紹介】
Language demonstrates structure while also showing considerable variation at all levels: languages differ from one another while still being shaped by the same principles; utterances within a language differ from one another while exhibiting the same structural patterns; languages change over time, but in fairly regular ways. This book focuses on the dynamic processes that create languages and give them their structure and variance. It outlines a theory of language that addresses the nature of grammar, taking into account its variance and gradience, and seeks explanation in terms of the recurrent processes that operate in language use. The evidence is based on the study of large corpora of spoken and written language, what we know about how languages change, as well as the results of experiments with language users. The result is an integrated theory of language use and language change which has implications for cognitive processing and language evolution.
【目次】
List of figures page vi
List of tables vii
Acknowledgements ix
1 A usage-based perspective on language
2 Rich memory for language: exemplar representation
3 Chunking and degrees of autonomy
4 Analogy and similarity
5 Categorization and the distribution of constructions in corpora
6 Where do constructions come from?
Synchrony and diachrony in a usage-based theory
7 Reanalysis or the gradual creation of new categories?
The English Auxiliary
8 Gradient constituency and gradual reanalysis
9 Conventionalization and the local vs. the general:
Modern English can
10 Exemplars and grammatical meaning:
the specific and the general
11 Language as a complex adaptive system:
the interaction of cognition, culture and use