Halliday's investigations into grammatical metaphor take us deeply into the way we construct and expand meanings, starting with representations of concrete experienced events and ending with theoretical worlds populated by abstract entities linked through generalized relations and causalities. He finds these processes most strikingly in the development of the modern sciences that have historically created robust virtual worlds of theory from observable material events. He sees the same processes of grammatical metaphor as children learn to participate in our built symbolic environment, particularly as they are introduced to these meaning systems in schools, an institution designed expressly for that purpose.' Professor Charles Bazerman, University of California, Santa Barbara.
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For nearly half a century, Professor M A K Halliday has enriched the discipline of linguistics with his keen insights into the social semiotic phenomenon we call language. This ten-volume series presents the seminal works of Professor Halliday.
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Introduction: How Big is a Language?; Part One: Grammatical Metaphor; 1. Language and the Reshaping of Human Experience; 2. Language and Knowledge: the 'Unpacking' of Text; 3. Things and Relations: Regrammaticizing Experience as Technical Knowledge; 4. The Grammatical Construction of Scientific Knowledge: the. Framing of the English Clause; Part Two: Scientific English; 5. On the Language of Physical Science; 6. Some Grammatical Problems in Scientific English; 7. On the Grammar of Scientific English; 8. Writing Science: Literacy and Discursive Power.
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"'Halliday's investigations into grammatical metaphor take us deeply into the way we construct and expand meanings, starting with representations of concrete experienced events and ending with a theoretical worlds populated by abstract entities linked through generalized relations and causalities. He finds these processes most strikingly in the development of the modern sciences that have historically created robust virtual worlds of theory from the observable material events of the world. But he sees these same processes in all the meaning systems of modern life, whether law, bureaucracy, economics, or arts. He sees the same processes of grammatical metaphor as children learn to participate in our built symbolic environment, particularly as they are introduced to these meaning systems in schools, an institution designed expressly for that purpose. The linguistic mechanisms Halliday identifies are congruent with Vygotsky's studies of how words come to direct our minds and perception, as individuals and societies. He shares with Vygotsky an understanding of how schooled or scientific concepts re-form the spontaneous concepts of everyday activity to sublate prior experience into higher degrees of abstraction. Both provide related accounts of how cultural history becomes embedded in the complex languages used in scientific, disciplined, or other cultural settings, so that we learn to think with the tools culture provides us, using our own aptitude for metaphorical thinking.' Professor Charles Bazerman, University of California, Santa Barbara."
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The fifth volume in the acclaimed Collected Works of M. A. K. Halliday series.
The Collected Works of M.A.K. Halliday is a series that brings together Halliday's publications in many branches of linguistics, both theoretical and applied (a distinction which he himself rejects), including grammar and semantics, discourse analysis and stylistics, phonology, sociolinguistics, computational linguistics, language education, and child language development.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780826488275
Publisert
2006-06-19
Utgiver
Vendor
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
Vekt
420 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
268
Redaktør
Forfatter