European University Institute Library

Discourse, Structure and Linguistic Choice, The Theory and Applications of Molecular Sememics, by T. Price Caldwell ; edited by Oliver Cresswell, Robert J. Stainton

Label
Discourse, Structure and Linguistic Choice, The Theory and Applications of Molecular Sememics, by T. Price Caldwell ; edited by Oliver Cresswell, Robert J. Stainton
Language
eng
resource.imageBitDepth
0
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Discourse, Structure and Linguistic Choice
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
1041152901
Responsibility statement
by T. Price Caldwell ; edited by Oliver Cresswell, Robert J. Stainton
Series statement
Springer eBooksStudies in Linguistics and Philosophy,, 101, 0924-4662Springer eBooks.
Sub title
The Theory and Applications of Molecular Sememics
Summary
This volume presents eight papers and a draft monograph by T. Price Caldwell on topics in linguistics, semiotics and philosophy of language. From the beginning of his professional career onwards, Caldwell wrote short fiction and poetry, and he taught English literature. The relevance to these of philosophy of language, semiotics and certain areas of linguistics increasingly caught his interest. This book presents the fruits of this later work. Of the papers included here, two are abstract and theoretical, focusing on linguistic methodology and Caldwell’s overarching views on the nature of meaning-in-context. His position here, which he called Molecular Sememics, echoes early Structuralism and Functionalism, but addresses shortfalls in each. Two other papers apply the method and theory to topics within semantics and pragmatics, including especially the structuring of discourse. The remaining four papers connect Caldwell’s theoretical insights to his life-long interests in fiction and pedagogy. The monograph – which Caldwell was left unfinished due to illness – aims to present as a single intellectual package the theory and the applications.--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Acknowledgements -- Foreword by Peter Shillingsburg -- Introduction by Robert J. Stainton -- I. THE THEORY -- The Epistemologies of Linguistic Science: Reassessing Structuralism, Redefining the Sememe (2006) -- Molecular Sememics: Toward a Model of Ordinary Language (1989) -- Whorf, Orwell, and Mentalese (The Molecular Sememe: Some Implications for Semantics) (2004) -- The Coerciveness of Discourse (2007).-Molecular Sememics (Unfinished Book Manuscript) -- Section One: The Molecular Sememe -- Section Two: History and Method -- Section Three: Tactics and Assumptions -- Section Four: Qualities of the Sememe -- Section Five: Teleological Structures -- II. THE APPLICATIONS -- Molecular Sememe: A Model for Literary Interpretation (2000) -- The Rhetoric of Plain Fact – Stevens’ “No Possom, No Sop, No Taters” (1995) -- American Shoot-Out: Hemingway vs. Richard Ford (2001) -- What I have Learned about English from Being in Japan -- (Or: Why can’t Japanese Students of English manage “a”, “an” and “the”?) (2010)
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