Perception Metaphor Workshop

12 and 13 October 2016 the Perception Metaphor Workshop will take place in Nijmegen, The Netherlands. This workshop will explore the myriad ways perceptual language serves as the basis of, or target for, metaphorical extension.

Confirmed speakers include:
Wendy Anderson (University of Glasgow)
Rosario Caballero (University of Castilla-La Mancha)
Iraide Ibarretxe-Antuñano (Universidad de Zaragoza)
Zoltán Kövecses (Eötvös Loránd University)
Martine Vanhove (Langage, Langues et Cultures d’Afrique Noire)
Bodo Winter (University of Birmingham)
Ulrike Zeshan (University of Central Lancashire)

For more information, read the call.

Metaphor Festival registration now open!

It is now possible to register for Metaphor Festival 2016!

Read the festival information and register online.

Deadline registration and payment: 15 June 2016

Elisabetta Gola: “Metaphors for reasoning”

As a member of the Metaphor Lab Amsterdam international advisory board, Elisabetta Gola(University of Cagliari) has written a short text about her current research.

You can read about ‘metaphors for reasoning’ here.

Goodbye to Zhen Pan

After half a year of research visit at the Metaphor Lab Amsterdam we said goodbye to Zhen Pan in the Keukenhof!

Metaphor Lab Amsterdam Annual Report

The Metaphor Lab Amsterdam annual report is now online:

MLA annual report 2015

Conceptualizing change in communication through metaphor

Christian Burgers’ article ‘Conceptualizing change in communication through metaphor‘ just got published in Journal of Communication:

Modeling communication patterns by individuals and organizations dealing with institutional and social change is an important challenge for communication scholars. Metaphors provide frames of thinking about societal topics. The ways metaphors change can thus reveal how conceptualizations of social topics change over time. Change occurs in two temporal paces: evolutionary (continuous) or revolutionary (discontinuous). Furthermore, change occurs in two ways: through incremental (meaning of extant metaphors change) or fundamental (old metaphors are replaced) transformation. I propose that studying shifts of metaphors can be used to model incremental and fundamental change in communication at both evolutionary and revolutionary pace. I describe how such shifts have been studied on the microlevel, mesolevel, and macrolevel through both qualitative and quantitative research methods.

Volume 6 of Metaphor in Language, Cognition and Communication is out

The sixth volume of the book series ‘Metaphor in Language, Cognition and Communication’ is out! The book is titled ‘Mixing Metaphor’ and is edited by Raymond W. Gibbs, Jr. (University of California, Santa Cruz).

Mixing metaphors in speech, writing, and even gesture, is traditionally viewed as a sign of inconsistency in thought and language. Despite the prominence of mixed metaphors, there have been surprisingly few attempts to comprehensively explain why people mix their metaphors so frequently and in the particular ways they do. This volume brings together a distinguished group of linguists, psychologists and computer scientists, who tackle the issue of how and why mixed metaphors arise and what communicative purposes they may serve. These scholars, almost unanimously, argue that mixing metaphors is a natural consequence of common metaphorical thought processes, highlighting important complexities of the metaphorical mind. Mixing Metaphor, for the first time, offers new, critical empirical and theoretical insights on a topic that has long been ignored within interdisciplinary metaphor studies.

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