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Onomatopoetics

Onomatopoetics

Joseph F. Graham

Cambridge University Press
1992
sidottu
The relationship of words to the things they represent and to the mind which forms them has long been the subject of linguistic enquiry. Joseph Graham’s challenging book takes this debate into the field of literary theory, making a searching enquiry into the nature of literary representation. It reviews the arguments of Plato's Cratylus on how words signify things, and of Chomsky’s theory of the innate ‘natural’ status of language (contrasted with Saussure's notion of its essential arbitrariness). In the process, Graham explores the issues of meaning and intentionality in representation, and questions of how the mind represents the world. Graham’s use of linguistic theories and models lead him to a new response to Wimsatt’s notion of the verbal icon, Stanley Fish’s concept of literature as self-consuming artefact, and de Man’s idea of its function as an allegory of reading. In showing them in fact to be complementary, he transcends the current controversies amongst literary theorists, arguing that the solution lies not in epistemology or philosophy, but in psychology and the study of how literature teaches and why humans learn best by example.
Onomatopoetics

Onomatopoetics

Joseph F. Graham

Cambridge University Press
2010
pokkari
The relationship of words to the things they represent and to the mind which forms them has long been the subject of linguistic enquiry. Joseph Graham's challenging book, first published in 1992, takes this debate into the field of literary theory, making a searching enquiry into the nature of literary representation. It reviews the arguments of Plato's Cratylus on how words signify things, and of Chomsky's theory of the innate 'natural' status of language (contrasted with Saussure's notion of its essential arbitrariness). In the process, Graham explores the issues of meaning and intentionality in representation, and examines plausible theories of how the mind represents the world. He transcends the controversies amongst literary theorists, arguing that the solution lies not in epistemology or philosophy, but in psychology and the study of how literature teaches and why humans learn best by example.