Catalog Search
 
Advanced Search

My shopping cart cart icon
Your cart is empty

My wish list wishlist icon
Your wish list is empty



Last update:
2 September 2010

© John Benjamins
Home

Explorations in Linguistic Relativity

Cover image
Edited by Martin Pütz and Marjolijn H. Verspoor
University of Koblenz-Landau / University of Groningen

2000. xvi, 369 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 3706 4 / EUR 125.00
978 1 55619 977 6 / USD 188.00
Add to shopping cart

Add to wish list

About a century after the year Benjamin Lee Whorf (1897-1941) was born, his theory complex is still the object of keen interest to linguists. Rencently, scholars have argued that it was not his theory complex itself, but an over-simplified, reduced section taken out of context that has become known as the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis that has met with so much resistance among linguists over the last few decades. Not only did Whorf present his views much more subtly than most people would believe, but he also dealt with a great number of other issues in his work. Taking Whorf’s own notion of linguistic relativity as a starting point, this volume explores the relation between language, mind and experience through its historical development, Whorf’s own writing, its misinterpretations, various theoretical and methodological issues and a closer look at a few specific issues in his work.


Table of contents

Preface
Martin Pütz and Marjolijn H. Verspoor
vii
Introduction
Martin Pütz and Marjolijn H. Verspoor
ix
Towards a ‘full pedigree’ of the ‘Sapir-Whorf hypothesis’: From Locke to Lucy
E.F.K. Koerner
1
How relativistic are Humboldt’s “Weltansichten”?
Jürgen Trabant
25
When is ‘linguistic relativity’ Worf’s linguistic relativity?
Penny Lee
45
Linguistic relativity and translation
Juliane House
69
Humboldt, Whorf and the roots of ecolinguistics
Peter Mühlhäusler
89
Loci of diversity and convergence in thought and language
Wallace Chafe
101
On linguocentrism
Nick J. Enfield
125
From the Jurassic dark: Linguistic relativity as evolutionary necessity
Paul R. Hays
159
Neuro-cognitive structure in the interplay of language and thought
Sydney M. Lamb
173
Language and thought: Collective tools for individual use
David B. Kronenfeld
197
Ontological classifiers as polycentric categories, as seen in Shona class 3 nouns
Gary B. Palmer and Claudia Woodman
225
Linguistic relativity and the plasticity of categorization: Universalism in a New Key
Robert E. MacLaury
249
Linguistic relativity as a function of ideological deixis
Bruce Hawkins
295
Why we subject incorporate (in English): a post-Whorfian view
Linda L. Thornburg and Klaus-Uwe Panther
319
Metalinguistic awareness in linguistic relativity: Cultural and subcultural practices across Chinese dialect communities
Minglang Zhou
345
Subject Index
365