Metaphor and Grammar in the Poetic Representation of Nature

This article is based on two assumptions which have already been evidenced in the literature of environmental discourse analysis. The first is that the normal congruent active material process clause (Halliday and Matthiessen 2004), if the empathy hierarchy (Langacker 1991) is imposed upon it, tends...

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Main Author: Andrew Goatly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Peoples' Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) 2017-12-01
Series:Russian journal of linguistics: Vestnik RUDN
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.rudn.ru/linguistics/article/view/15404
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spelling doaj-1e3c9fa77dbe45329ebdc4cf130ba6b72020-11-25T01:49:12ZengPeoples' Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)Russian journal of linguistics: Vestnik RUDN2312-91822312-92122017-12-01211487210.22363/2312-9182-2017-21-1-48-7214794Metaphor and Grammar in the Poetic Representation of NatureAndrew Goatly0Университет ЛиннаньThis article is based on two assumptions which have already been evidenced in the literature of environmental discourse analysis. The first is that the normal congruent active material process clause (Halliday and Matthiessen 2004), if the empathy hierarchy (Langacker 1991) is imposed upon it, tends to represent humans as acting in a unidirectional way upon a passive environment (Goatly 2002, 2007). The second is that much pro-environmental discourse, such as the Worldwatch Institute’s reports, for the most part adopts this grammar and thereby undervalues the power of nature as a force independent of humans but with power over them (Goatly and Hiradhar 2016). This article builds on work already done in Goatly (2000, 2007) and Goatly and Hiradhar (2016) on non-congruent grammar, co-ordination, along with personification and other forms of metaphor, to represent the human-nature relationship in ways which are more in keeping with modern science, and more helpful from an ecological viewpoint. The poetic texts discussed are taken from Wordsworth’s The Prelude , Edward Thomas’ Collected Poems and Alice Oswald’s Woods etc. Besides the use of grammatical co-ordination and metaphor/literalisation to blur the human nature boundary, they illustrate the use of nominalisations, ergative verbs, the activation of tokens and existents, the emphasis on nature as sayer and experiencer, rather than goal, which is a grammar (and use of metaphor) quite different from the patterns in so-called environmental and news discourse.http://journals.rudn.ru/linguistics/article/view/15404экологический дискурсметафораперсонификацияпоэтический текст
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew Goatly
spellingShingle Andrew Goatly
Metaphor and Grammar in the Poetic Representation of Nature
Russian journal of linguistics: Vestnik RUDN
экологический дискурс
метафора
персонификация
поэтический текст
author_facet Andrew Goatly
author_sort Andrew Goatly
title Metaphor and Grammar in the Poetic Representation of Nature
title_short Metaphor and Grammar in the Poetic Representation of Nature
title_full Metaphor and Grammar in the Poetic Representation of Nature
title_fullStr Metaphor and Grammar in the Poetic Representation of Nature
title_full_unstemmed Metaphor and Grammar in the Poetic Representation of Nature
title_sort metaphor and grammar in the poetic representation of nature
publisher Peoples' Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)
series Russian journal of linguistics: Vestnik RUDN
issn 2312-9182
2312-9212
publishDate 2017-12-01
description This article is based on two assumptions which have already been evidenced in the literature of environmental discourse analysis. The first is that the normal congruent active material process clause (Halliday and Matthiessen 2004), if the empathy hierarchy (Langacker 1991) is imposed upon it, tends to represent humans as acting in a unidirectional way upon a passive environment (Goatly 2002, 2007). The second is that much pro-environmental discourse, such as the Worldwatch Institute’s reports, for the most part adopts this grammar and thereby undervalues the power of nature as a force independent of humans but with power over them (Goatly and Hiradhar 2016). This article builds on work already done in Goatly (2000, 2007) and Goatly and Hiradhar (2016) on non-congruent grammar, co-ordination, along with personification and other forms of metaphor, to represent the human-nature relationship in ways which are more in keeping with modern science, and more helpful from an ecological viewpoint. The poetic texts discussed are taken from Wordsworth’s The Prelude , Edward Thomas’ Collected Poems and Alice Oswald’s Woods etc. Besides the use of grammatical co-ordination and metaphor/literalisation to blur the human nature boundary, they illustrate the use of nominalisations, ergative verbs, the activation of tokens and existents, the emphasis on nature as sayer and experiencer, rather than goal, which is a grammar (and use of metaphor) quite different from the patterns in so-called environmental and news discourse.
topic экологический дискурс
метафора
персонификация
поэтический текст
url http://journals.rudn.ru/linguistics/article/view/15404
work_keys_str_mv AT andrewgoatly metaphorandgrammarinthepoeticrepresentationofnature
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