Appropriation, Gentrification, Colonisation: Newly Synonymous?

Appropriation, gentrification, and colonisation originated as precise technical terms. This study analyses examples of each word in recent mainstream online news texts, and demonstrates that all three have undergone semantic change, particularly metaphorisation and generalisation (cf. Geeraerts [201...

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Main Author: Seth W. Mehl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université Jean Moulin - Lyon 3 2020-12-01
Series:Lexis: Journal in English Lexicology
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/lexis/4603
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author Seth W. Mehl
author_facet Seth W. Mehl
author_sort Seth W. Mehl
collection DOAJ
description Appropriation, gentrification, and colonisation originated as precise technical terms. This study analyses examples of each word in recent mainstream online news texts, and demonstrates that all three have undergone semantic change, particularly metaphorisation and generalisation (cf. Geeraerts [2010: 26]). Language users tend to select and emphasise shared semantic features of each, to the exclusion of other semantic features, such that the terms are in some circumstances, for many language users, interchangeable. I provide factual evidence (cf. Wallis [2019]) or attestations (cf. Zgusta [1971]) of these terms’ newly emerging semantic relationships, and I present evidence for decolonisation as a preferred contradictory antonym to all three (cf. Murphy [2010]). I analyse examples in which language users actively and critically employ these terms alongside each other, defining or negotiating meanings of each; and I explore possibilities for alternation in some shared attested syntagmatic combinations, such as the appropriation, gentrification, or (de)colonisation of history. I discuss mechanisms of change, with reference to the philological tradition (Sperber [1923], [1938]; Nerlich [1992]), structuralism (Ullmann [1963]), and cognitive semantics (Blank [1999]), and propose a process whereby affective charge motivates semantic generalisation in precise technical vocabulary when it begins to be used in contentious, fraught public debate.
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spelling doaj-art-172df7efbd6a420ebb81e7a86a00d8de2024-12-09T14:52:47ZengUniversité Jean Moulin - Lyon 3Lexis: Journal in English Lexicology1951-62152020-12-011610.4000/lexis.4603Appropriation, Gentrification, Colonisation: Newly Synonymous?Seth W. MehlAppropriation, gentrification, and colonisation originated as precise technical terms. This study analyses examples of each word in recent mainstream online news texts, and demonstrates that all three have undergone semantic change, particularly metaphorisation and generalisation (cf. Geeraerts [2010: 26]). Language users tend to select and emphasise shared semantic features of each, to the exclusion of other semantic features, such that the terms are in some circumstances, for many language users, interchangeable. I provide factual evidence (cf. Wallis [2019]) or attestations (cf. Zgusta [1971]) of these terms’ newly emerging semantic relationships, and I present evidence for decolonisation as a preferred contradictory antonym to all three (cf. Murphy [2010]). I analyse examples in which language users actively and critically employ these terms alongside each other, defining or negotiating meanings of each; and I explore possibilities for alternation in some shared attested syntagmatic combinations, such as the appropriation, gentrification, or (de)colonisation of history. I discuss mechanisms of change, with reference to the philological tradition (Sperber [1923], [1938]; Nerlich [1992]), structuralism (Ullmann [1963]), and cognitive semantics (Blank [1999]), and propose a process whereby affective charge motivates semantic generalisation in precise technical vocabulary when it begins to be used in contentious, fraught public debate.https://journals.openedition.org/lexis/4603appropriationsynonymysemantic broadeningmetaphorisationhyponymygentrification
spellingShingle Seth W. Mehl
Appropriation, Gentrification, Colonisation: Newly Synonymous?
Lexis: Journal in English Lexicology
appropriation
synonymy
semantic broadening
metaphorisation
hyponymy
gentrification
title Appropriation, Gentrification, Colonisation: Newly Synonymous?
title_full Appropriation, Gentrification, Colonisation: Newly Synonymous?
title_fullStr Appropriation, Gentrification, Colonisation: Newly Synonymous?
title_full_unstemmed Appropriation, Gentrification, Colonisation: Newly Synonymous?
title_short Appropriation, Gentrification, Colonisation: Newly Synonymous?
title_sort appropriation gentrification colonisation newly synonymous
topic appropriation
synonymy
semantic broadening
metaphorisation
hyponymy
gentrification
url https://journals.openedition.org/lexis/4603
work_keys_str_mv AT sethwmehl appropriationgentrificationcolonisationnewlysynonymous