Faculty of philology department of english philology viktorija mi
The Conceptual and Contextual Metaphor of Time and Space in the Novel
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4.3.The Conceptual and Contextual Metaphor of Time and Space in the Novel According to the theorist Lakoff (1987:302), human life consists of various kinds of experience that is structured in the mind and in the memory by certain “directly meaningful concepts”. These basic concepts are based on associations and links between places, events, and experiences that people tend to classify and analyze on the basis of their subjective understanding of reality. In Lakoff’s words (ibid.), concepts arising in the mind are important for our cognition because they provide “certain fixed points in the objective evaluation of situations”. Indeed, these structures of cognition can be divided into basic-level structures and image-schema structures: basic-level structures are characterized “as a result of our capacities for gestalt perception, mental imagery, and motor movement” (ibid.) and manifest as the basic feelings of hunger or pain, whereas image schemas are certain spatial mappings that consist of the source, path, and goal, or the central and peripheral elements. In general, Lakoff believes that the variety of concepts that occurs in the mind gradually forms certain patterns of thought, which “derive their fundamental meaningfulness directly from their ability to match up with preconceptual structure. Such direct matchings provide a basis for an account of truth and knowledge”. (1987:303) Preconceptual structures are mapped from source domains to target domains and thus, influence the rise and development of conceptual metaphors that play a vital role in our ability to think in abstract terms like knowledge. 83 Zoltan Kovecses (2002: 36) supports Lakoff’s insights about conceptual metaphors in life and art and complements them by saying that in literature, conceptual metaphors enable writers to represent in linear language complex nature of the human consciousness including feelings, emotions, dreams, memories, and other mental phenomena. In his opinion, the psychological reality and multidimensionality of conceptual metaphors provide readers with a better understanding of the piece of fiction they are reading and thus, encourage them to think in a creative critical way by making their own judgements, interpretations, allusions, and presuppositions. By comparison, Jurga Cibulskienė believes ( 2006) that within the context of a particular book, the conceptual metaphors are not used merely to illustrate one thing in terms of another; instead, they are both cohesive mechanisms of evoking emotions and conveying means of representing consciousness that would have been impossible to express in ordinary language. According to Kovecses (ibid.), structurally, conceptual metaphors can be characterized as the duality of two elements, namely A and B, which complement one another and complete a certain formula, where “the target domain (A) is comprehended through a source domain (B).” In linguist’s opinion, the semantic core of a conceptual metaphor can be fully understood only via the relationships that exist during the two aforementioned domains. Indeed, as I have already mentioned in previous chapters, Woolf’s style of writing has been defined as innovative and experimental because of her attempt to reveal the original nature of the individual consciousness by numerous verbal means. Lee believes that the writer purposefully uses allusive emotional vocabulary as well as stylistic means that enable her to express the most secret and subtle feelings of the human beings.According to me, in To the Lighthouse, Woolf uses a number of interesting conceptual metaphors which play a vital role in her readers’ ability to rediscover the meaning of abstract terms like life and death, happiness and sorrow, time and space. The notion of time, in my opinion, perceives the majority of attention in the novel and consequently, I suggest analyzing three conceptual metaphors that serve for discourse organization and construction as well as representation of varying consciousness styles. In the novel, the writer seems to extend, elaborate, and even reformulate well-known conceptual metaphors related to travelling, growing, changing, and discovering. Hence, judging from the temporal perspective, I would show the following kernel conceptual metaphors that enhance the issues of time and space in the figure below. 84 LIFE ART TIME Figure 7. Conceptual Metaphors of Time and Space in the Novel To the Lighthouse Download 0.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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