Research/Image Schemas

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References

There is a dissertation about Image Schemas at https://d-nb.info/121996610X/34

They are preverbal and while language and reasoning build from them, they are not in themselves learned from language. While there are discussions on which concepts should be included in the term image schema, a common restriction is to describe them as the generic spatiotemporal relationships 4 learned from the repeated in- teraction and perception with and of the environment and the objects therein.

From: 5 Ming-yu Tseng. Exploring image schemas as a critical concept : Toward a critical-cognitive linguistic account of image-schematic interactions. Journal of literary semantics, 36:135–157, 2007

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/249941358_Exploring_image_schemas_as_a_critical_concept_Toward_a_critical-cognitive_linguistic_account_of_image-schematic_interactions


The first pertinent distinction is that image schemas can be schemas or which notions are image-schematic to begin with, some common examples are Containment, Support and Link (see Figure 2.1). Despite working on the topic of introducing novel image- schematic concepts and how to structure them, no concrete stand on which image schemas that should be counted into a canon of image schemas is made. Instead, conventions from the literature are used where already introduced image schemas and their primitives are written with small caps, spatial and conceptual primitives that are still up for general agreement are written in simple lower case. The only exception where novel image schemas are written with small caps are those that can be provided with empirical support. both static and dynamic While there is currently no consensus on the number of image .

List of ImageSchemas

Image_Schema/Static Image Schema Categories

Image_Schema/Orientational

Image_Schema/Above

==== Image_Schema/Below ==== space concepts involving IN-OUT, UP- DOWN, FAR-NEAR, CONTACT, CENTER-PERIPHERY, etc., whether they are prepositions (e.g. “in”, “on”), adverbs (e.g. “up”, “down”), nouns (e.g. “center”, “core”, “margin”), adjectives (e.g. “far”, “adjacent”), or verbs (e.g. “touch”, “connect”, “fall”).

Image_Schema/Up

Image_Schema/Down

Image_Schema/Center

Image_Schema/Periphery

Image_Schema/Topological=

=== Image_Schema/Forcedynamic

Image_Schema/Dynamic Image Schema Categories

=== Image_Schema/Spatial Schemas Image_Schema/Temporal_Schemas

Space Image Schemas

6.2 Force Image Schemas 6.3 Contain Image Schemas 6.4 Movement Schemas

Balance Schemas

Object Image Schemas

Multiple Objects