LINGUIST List 16.1431
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Wed May 04 2005
Calls: Text/Corpus Ling/Birmingham, UK
Editor for this issue: Andrea Berez
<andrea linguistlist.org>
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Directory
1. Alan
Wallington,
3rd Workshop on Corpus-Based Approaches to Figurative Language
Message 1: 3rd Workshop on Corpus-Based Approaches to Figurative Language
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Date: 04-May-2005
From: Alan Wallington <A.M.Wallington cs.bham.ac.uk>
Subject: 3rd Workshop on Corpus-Based Approaches to Figurative Language
Full Title: 3rd Workshop on Corpus-Based Approaches to Figurative Language Date: 14-Jul-2005 - 14-Jul-2005 Location: Birmingham, United Kingdom Contact Person: Alan Wallington Meeting Email: A.M.Wallington cs.bham.ac.uk Web Site: http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~amw/CorpusLinguistics05.html Linguistic Field(s): Cognitive Science; Computational Linguistics; Text/Corpus Linguistics Call Deadline: 25-May-2005 Meeting Description: The third workshop will continue with one of the strengths of the series, namely its interdisciplinary nature, asking only that attendees share an interest either in the use of corpora to elucidate aspects of figurative language, such as metaphor, metonymy, irony, or hyperbole, or in the study of corpus techniques and tools that may be needed for this. However, we believe that the field has now matured sufficiently to allow us to propose a theme, namely: 'the nature and use of the source domain'. Papers addressing this topic will be particularly welcome. See http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~amw/CorpusLinguistics05.html for more details. SUBMISSIONS Anybody wishing to present at the workshop should submit a two-page extended abstract. References and tables need not be included in the two pages. If accepted, authors will be invited to submit a full paper (maximum eight pages) prior to the workshop which will be included in the workshop proceedings and published as a University of Birmingham Technical Report with an ISBN number. As reviewing will be blind, the paper should not include the authors' names and affiliations. Furthermore, self-references that reveal the author's identity, e.g., 'We previously showed (Smith, 1991)...', should be avoided. Send the pdf, postscript, rtf, or MS Word form of your submission to: Alan Wallington (A.M.Wallington cs.bham.ac.uk), who will also answer any queries regarding the submission. WORKSHOP DEADLINES -Abstract submission deadline: Wednesday 25th May 2005. -Notification of acceptance or rejection: Monday 6th June 2005. -Deadline for receipt of full papers for inclusion in workshop proceedings: Thursday 30th June 2005. -Date of Workshop: Thursday 14th July. Third Workshop on Corpus-Based Approaches to Figurative Language July 14th 2005 Birmingham UK http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~amw/CorpusLinguistics05.html part of Corpus Linguistics 2005 (conference webpage: http://www.corpus.bham.ac.uk/conference/) THEME A leading hypothesis in metaphor theory is that our knowledge of familiar source domains is used systematically to help understand or delineate difficult, complex or abstract target domains. Importantly for this approach, source domains are usually thought of as consisting of vast networks of knowledge such as we would have of buildings, families, journeys wars, etc. Under this approach, many different aspects of the source are viewed as being in a systematic correspondence with aspects of the target and inferences that can be made about the source are understood as transferring to inferences about the target. And there has been much research using corpora amongst other tools to uncover the systematically related sets of correspondences that would associate these vast, ontologically rich, source domains to the more abstract target domains. However despite research detailing many examples of such systematic correspondences, there remain problems with the hypothesis. For example, Grady has noted numerous instances where individual correspondences, reported as belonging to one set of source domain to target domain correspondences have a much wider currency and can also be found amongst the correspondences proposed for completely different source and target domain pairings. Conversely, he has also noted the existence of common and prominent features of the source domain that appear to have no target domain correspondents. For example, whilst the language of buildings is often used to describe the target domain of theories, such important parts of a building as the windows or the internal wiring have no common equivalents in the target domain of theories. These observations suggest that giving primacy to the type of rich domain suggested earlier might be a mistake. But must all the apparently systematically related correspondences that were previously taken to define the type of ontologically rich domain that can be used to structure an abstract target be reanalysed either as primary metaphors, the result of the interaction of primary metaphors or as novel coinings? What role is there now for the traditional view of the source domain? It is very difficult to rely solely on intuitions on this issue. A further problem with source domains is that often the type of situations being described are not ones that would normally hold of the source domain if one were not speaking metaphorically, and can at times be extremely odd or counter to much of our general knowledge about the source. This would cast doubt on the view that familiar reasoning patterns imported from source are used to help structure the target. For example, Musolff (2004) presents numerous examples drawn from British and German newspapers in which various nations within the European Union are described as ''fathers of the Euro''. But how can a child have multiple fathers and why are no mothers assumed? This is not a case of using the structure of the familiar to describe the less familiar or abstract. One might entertain the hypothesis that if a recognisable odd situation holds within the source domain, then the oddness would transfer in an invariant manner to the target. Yet this is certainly not the case here. Other examples in which important and familiar aspects of the source are ignored when the source is used metaphorically are easy to find. Compare the following two conventional metaphors: 'This reflects the views of the majority'; 'This is a mirror image of the views of the majority'. The existence of the latter shows that we are familiar with the 'reversing' property of reflections, but the two metaphors have opposite meanings. Thus much of our familiar knowledge of reflections is ignored when the former is used. Indeed, it is often not just that source domain knowledge is ignored but that at times it is directly flouted in the service of metaphor. Aristotle argues that there is conventional analogy (in modern terms) between 'the shield of Ares' and the 'cup of Dionysus', and this allows the metaphor 'the cup of Ares' to be used to refer to the shield. However, he also notes that one may deny the source term one of its proper attributes and describe the shield as 'the wineless cup'. But what is a wineless cup? It seems that the breaking of source domain expectations is a signal that a metaphor is being used. Andreas Musolff. 2004. Metaphor and Political Discourse Analogical Reasoning in Debates about Europe. Palgrave Macmillan. SUBMISSIONS Anybody wishing to present at the workshop should submit a two-page extended abstract. References and tables need not be included in the two pages. If accepted, authors will be invited to submit a full paper (maximum eight pages) prior to the workshop which will be included in the workshop proceedings and published as a University of Birmingham Technical Report with an ISBN number. As reviewing will be blind, the paper should not include the authors' names and affiliations. Furthermore, self-references that reveal the author's identity, e.g., ''We previously showed (Smith, 1991)...'', should be avoided. Send the pdf, postscript, rtf, or MS Word form of your submission to: Alan Wallington (A.M.Wallington cs.bham.ac.uk ), who will also answer any queries regarding the submission. WORKSHOP DEADLINES Abstract submission deadline: Wednesday 25th May 2005 Notification of acceptance or rejection: Monday 6th June 2005 Deadline for receipt of full papers for inclusion in workshop proceedings: Thursday 30th June 2005 Date of Workshop: Thursday 14th July WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS John Barnden School of Computer Science University of Birmingham Birmingham B15 2TT U.K. J.A.Barnden cs.bham.ac.uk Sheila Glasbey School of Computer Science University of Birmingham Birmingham B15 2TT U.K. S.R.Glasbey cs.bham.ac.uk Mark Lee Schoolof Computer Science University of Birmingham Birmingham B15 2TT U.K. M.G.Lee cs.bham.ac.uk Alan Wallington School of Computer Science University of Birmingham Birmingham B15 2TT U.K. A.M.Wallington cs.bham.ac.uk Li J (Jane) Zhang School of Computer Science University of Birmingham Birmingham B15 2TT U.K. L.Zhang cs.bham.ac.uk
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