The Metaphorical Conceptualization of Sadness in the Anglo-Saxon Elegies

Publication date

2020-04-29T05:17:40Z

2020-04-29T05:17:40Z

2018

2020-04-29T05:17:40Z

Abstract

The aim of this paper is to explore the predominant metaphorical conceptualization of sadness in three Old English elegiac monologues whose main themes are the pain and solitude of exile and separation. Taking as a starting point the Cognitive Theory of Metaphor and briefly reviewing the experimental evidence that supports the experiential grounding of our concep- tualization of sadness, as well as our own previous research on the Old English expressions for emotional distress, we analyze the use of sadness metaphors in the elegies The Wanderer, The Seafarer and The Wife's Lament. This analysis clearly shows that in the Old English period, as in present day English, sadness was largely expressed in metaphorical terms. Cold, darkness and physical dis- comfort were recurrent source domains in its depiction, which suggests a long- term trend in the metaphorical conceptualization of sadness, whose cognitive reality is empirically supported by experimental research. Keywords: conceptual metaphor, elegiac poetry, sadness expressions, Old English

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

De Gruyter Mouton

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Reproducció del document publicat a:

Journal of Literary Semantics, 2018, vol. 47, num. 2, p. 85-102

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(c) De Gruyter Mouton, 2018

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