Mind, Body, and Metaphor in Ancient Greek Concepts of Emotion

This paper presents examples of the role played by metaphor in the formation of ancient Greek emotional concepts. Previous studies of emotion in ancient Greek societies have focused chiefly on the terms that the ancient Greeks used to label their emotional experiences. Such an approach is fundamenta...

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Main Author: Douglas Cairns
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Centre de Recherches Historiques 2021-05-01
Series:L'Atelier du CRH
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/acrh/7416
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author Douglas Cairns
author_facet Douglas Cairns
author_sort Douglas Cairns
collection DOAJ
description This paper presents examples of the role played by metaphor in the formation of ancient Greek emotional concepts. Previous studies of emotion in ancient Greek societies have focused chiefly on the terms that the ancient Greeks used to label their emotional experiences. Such an approach is fundamental, yet overlooks important elements of the language of emotion. The characteristic symptoms, physiological changes, expressions, and behaviours associated with the emotions typically become metonyms for the emotions themselves and are represented in cognitive metaphors that form part of a culture’s conceptual model of emotion. Thus the embodied nature of emotions is reflected in language, and in so far as the metaphors and metonyms of folk physiology are limited by the observed phenomena of real physiology and predicated on basic conceptual structures that are rooted in human beings’ embodied nature, no serious study of emotion language can afford to ignore these aspects. A comprehensive study of emotional metaphor in ancient Greek can thus be expected to present much that is, in broad terms, familiar to us from our own languages. The interesting questions, however, concern the interplay between what is universal and what is specific in both the formation and the application of such concepts. This paper explores some of these questions with particular reference to two Greek images: the symptom of shivering or shuddering; and the representation of grief and other emotions as enveloping garments.
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spelling doaj-art-bf7b1d6fb0cd48dab22ec12343a9b64d2024-12-09T15:44:46ZfraCentre de Recherches HistoriquesL'Atelier du CRH1760-79142021-05-011610.4000/acrh.7416Mind, Body, and Metaphor in Ancient Greek Concepts of EmotionDouglas CairnsThis paper presents examples of the role played by metaphor in the formation of ancient Greek emotional concepts. Previous studies of emotion in ancient Greek societies have focused chiefly on the terms that the ancient Greeks used to label their emotional experiences. Such an approach is fundamental, yet overlooks important elements of the language of emotion. The characteristic symptoms, physiological changes, expressions, and behaviours associated with the emotions typically become metonyms for the emotions themselves and are represented in cognitive metaphors that form part of a culture’s conceptual model of emotion. Thus the embodied nature of emotions is reflected in language, and in so far as the metaphors and metonyms of folk physiology are limited by the observed phenomena of real physiology and predicated on basic conceptual structures that are rooted in human beings’ embodied nature, no serious study of emotion language can afford to ignore these aspects. A comprehensive study of emotional metaphor in ancient Greek can thus be expected to present much that is, in broad terms, familiar to us from our own languages. The interesting questions, however, concern the interplay between what is universal and what is specific in both the formation and the application of such concepts. This paper explores some of these questions with particular reference to two Greek images: the symptom of shivering or shuddering; and the representation of grief and other emotions as enveloping garments.https://journals.openedition.org/acrh/7416emotionmetaphormetonymyrole of the body in emotion concepts
spellingShingle Douglas Cairns
Mind, Body, and Metaphor in Ancient Greek Concepts of Emotion
L'Atelier du CRH
emotion
metaphor
metonymy
role of the body in emotion concepts
title Mind, Body, and Metaphor in Ancient Greek Concepts of Emotion
title_full Mind, Body, and Metaphor in Ancient Greek Concepts of Emotion
title_fullStr Mind, Body, and Metaphor in Ancient Greek Concepts of Emotion
title_full_unstemmed Mind, Body, and Metaphor in Ancient Greek Concepts of Emotion
title_short Mind, Body, and Metaphor in Ancient Greek Concepts of Emotion
title_sort mind body and metaphor in ancient greek concepts of emotion
topic emotion
metaphor
metonymy
role of the body in emotion concepts
url https://journals.openedition.org/acrh/7416
work_keys_str_mv AT douglascairns mindbodyandmetaphorinancientgreekconceptsofemotion