The Concept of Honor in the Language of Early Arabic Poetry  Paid

A Cultural Linguistic Study

by Bartosz Pietrzak (Author)
©2022, Monographs, 358 Pages

Series: Lodz Studies in Language, Volume 72

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The book presents an ethnolinguistic study on lexical expressions of honor in the Language of Early Arabic Poetry. It is the first application of Cultural-Linguistic methodology in research on the language and culture of al-Jahiliyya Arabs. Consequently, it is one of the first cultural cognitive linguistic studies on Classical Arabic semantics and lexicology. The book examines the use of Arabic honor-related lexis in the oral-formulaic pre-Islamic poetry, and interprets lexical expressions as encoding cultural conceptualizations: cognitive schemata and categories, and conceptual metaphors and metonymies. An exhaustive description of pre-Islamic Arabic cultural models of honor and social evaluation is offered alongside semantic frames for discourses of honor available to pre-Islamic Arabs.

Early Arabic Poetry and its language as an index for self-identification; methodology of Cultural Linguistics; anthropological data on honor; pre-Islamic Arabic code of honor: being karīm; generosity-honorability metonymy; karāma-honor paid to equals; ḥasab-value of honorability; šaraf-honor-precedence is elevated place; ˁirḍ is personal honor; embodiment of ˁirḍ is body; shame-dishonor model; model of honor; model of social evaluation of worthiness; Arabic-European contrast

Pages:
358
Year:
2022
ISBN (HARDBACK):
9783631882900 (Active)
ISBN (EPUB):
9783631892671 (Active)
ISBN (PDF):
9783631892237 (Active)
Language:
English
Published:
Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Warszawa, Wien, 2022. 358 pp., 1 fig. b/w, 29 tables.

Bartosz Pietrzak, Ph.D., works at the Jagiellonian University in Cracow, Poland. His interests lie in Cultural Linguistics and Frame Semantics research in Semitic languages. He studies the cultural conceptualizations encoded in the formulas of the Language of Early Arabic Poetry, as well as in modern Arabic dialects, Modern Hebrew, and Maltese.

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