Naive Images of Globalization from a Linguistic Viewpoint
Articles
Tatyana G. Skrebtsova
St. Petersburg State University, Russia
Published 2003 June 2
https://doi.org/10.15388/RESPECTUS.2003.25
PDF

Keywords

cognitive linguistics
conceptual metaphor theory
sprachliches Weltbild
mental representation

How to Cite

Skrebtsova, T.G. (2003) “Naive Images of Globalization from a Linguistic Viewpoint”, Respectus Philologicus, 4(9), pp. 73–79. doi:10.15388/RESPECTUS.2003.25.

Abstract

The notion of globalisation is gaining ground in modern world but its meaning is still rather vague and uncertain. Scholars make their best trying to provide this new phenomenon with an expert definition and thus fit it into the scientific worldview. Globalisation is also widely discussed in the media and enjoys lively interest on the part of laymen. People try to grasp it, form their opinion and attitude toward it. The resulting images of globalisation in popular mind differ greatly, with attitudes ranging from extremely negative to moderately favourable.

The paper presents an analysis of naive views of globalisation based on cognitive linguistics methodology and, in particular, on conceptual metaphor theory of G. Lakoff and M. Johnson. Research data are drawn from Russian-language Internet resources. The paper investigates conceptual metaphors that contribute to the naive understanding of the phenomenon. Two major images of globalization in popular mind are singled out and examined.

PDF

References

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.