1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910728397503321

Autore

Romand David

Titolo

Emotions, Metacognition, and the Intuition of Language Normativity : Theoretical, Epistemological, and Historical Perspectives on Linguistic Feeling / / edited by David Romand, Michel Le Du

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2023

ISBN

3-031-17913-7

Edizione

[1st ed. 2023.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (370 pages)

Altri autori (Persone)

Le DuMichel

Disciplina

401.9

Soggetti

Linguistics

Philology

Language acquisition

Language and languages—Philosophy

Emotions

Knowledge, Sociology of

Theoretical Linguistics / Grammar

Languages

Language Acquisition and Development

Philosophy of Language

Emotion

Sociology of Knowledge and Discourse

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

1. Introduction -- Part I Cross-disciplinary Approaches to Linguistic Feeling from Herder to Wittgenstein -- 2. “What the Germans Call Sprachgefühl.” Sprachgefühl in Early German Linguistics. Selected Examples of Ways of Understanding -- 3. Assent, Sentiment and Linguistic Feeling in Jac. van Ginneken’s Psycholinguistics -- 4. On the Normative Side of Saussure’s “Linguistic Feeling” -- 5. Sapir's Form-Feeling and its Historical Context -- 6. Edward Sapir: Form-Feeling in Language, Culture, and Poetry -- 7. Meaning-Blindness, and Linguistic Feeling: Wittgenstein on How We “Experience” Meaning -- Part II



Current Scientific and Philosophical Perspectives on Linguistic Feeling -- 8. Intuitions in Linguistics: A Blessing or a Curse? -- 9. The Good, the Bad, and the Yucky: Valenced Linguistic Intuitions and Linguistic Methodology -- 10. Linguistic Feeling in Real Life and in Linguistics -- 11. Linguistic Feeling and Grammaticalization: From Concepts to Case Studies -- 12. Linguistic Feeling: A Relational Approach Incorporating Epistemology, Theories of Language, and Human-Machine Interaction.

Sommario/riassunto

This book proposes a comprehensive discussion of the issue of linguistic feeling, the subject’s metalinguistic capacity to intuitively apprehend the normative – lexical, syntactic, morphological, phonological… – dimensions of a definite language he or she is acquainted with. The volume’s twelve contributions aim to revisit a concept that, through a fluctuating terminology (“Sprachgefühl,” “sentiment de la langue,” “linguistic intuitions,” etc.), had developed, since the late 18th century, within a variety of cultural contexts and research traditions, and whose theoretical, epistemological, and historical ins and outs had not been systematically explored so far. Beginning with a long opening chapter, the book consists of two parts, one tracing the multifaceted approaches to linguistic feeling from Herder to Wittgenstein, and one offering a representative overview of the debates about the issue at stake in current linguistics and philosophy, while addressing the question of the place of metacognition, normativity, and affectivity in language processes.