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Words for odours: language skills and cultural insights

While the human sense of smell has long been considered underdeveloped, there is, nonetheless, a growing body of literature to attest to its remarkable importance in human behaviour. However, there has been very little work conducted in linguistics, which is all the more regrettable as economic glob...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Barkat-Defradas, Melissa, Motte-Florac, Elisabeth
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2016
Materias:
XX
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2667679
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author Barkat-Defradas, Melissa
Motte-Florac, Elisabeth
author_facet Barkat-Defradas, Melissa
Motte-Florac, Elisabeth
author_sort Barkat-Defradas, Melissa
collection CERN
description While the human sense of smell has long been considered underdeveloped, there is, nonetheless, a growing body of literature to attest to its remarkable importance in human behaviour. However, there has been very little work conducted in linguistics, which is all the more regrettable as economic globalization has made it increasingly useful to communicate on odours in a variety of domains such as the wine and perfume industries. This volume brings together a number of studies on how olfactory experiences are verbalized, applying both pragmatic and theoretical approaches to better understanding the different strategies speakers use to talk of odours. Four major themes are investigated here. Part I (From Olfactory Perception to Verbalisation) examines the various, complex cognitive operations implemented in the process of olfactory perception. Explorations of recollection processes, also crucial for odour verbalization, provide important insights into how cultural conditions contribute to shaping olfactory memories. Part II (Categories and Hedonic Valence) focuses on how speakers circumvent paucity in vocabulary to describe odours in a variety of ways. Sorting operations make it possible to either select an appropriate linguistic label for a given odour or to compensate for the lack thereof by using consistent descriptions. Indeed, although such cognitive operations are influenced by a subject's environment, cultural representations and goals, the contributions to this section show that hedonic value is crucial for categorizing odours. Part III (Lexical and Cultural Variation) illustrates that some languages spoken on the African continent (such as the Arabic and Bantu languages) are relatively rich in their olfactory lexicon, thereby revealing the greater attention paid to odours in these societies. That being said, such relative richness or paucity can be modulated through a variety of mechanisms which shape the linguistic output, as exemplified in Part IV (Putting Odours into Words), where the olfactory lexicons of two Indo-European languages (French and Greek) are analysed from a comparative perspective.
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spelling cern-26676792021-04-21T18:27:47Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2667679engBarkat-Defradas, MelissaMotte-Florac, ElisabethWords for odours: language skills and cultural insightsXXWhile the human sense of smell has long been considered underdeveloped, there is, nonetheless, a growing body of literature to attest to its remarkable importance in human behaviour. However, there has been very little work conducted in linguistics, which is all the more regrettable as economic globalization has made it increasingly useful to communicate on odours in a variety of domains such as the wine and perfume industries. This volume brings together a number of studies on how olfactory experiences are verbalized, applying both pragmatic and theoretical approaches to better understanding the different strategies speakers use to talk of odours. Four major themes are investigated here. Part I (From Olfactory Perception to Verbalisation) examines the various, complex cognitive operations implemented in the process of olfactory perception. Explorations of recollection processes, also crucial for odour verbalization, provide important insights into how cultural conditions contribute to shaping olfactory memories. Part II (Categories and Hedonic Valence) focuses on how speakers circumvent paucity in vocabulary to describe odours in a variety of ways. Sorting operations make it possible to either select an appropriate linguistic label for a given odour or to compensate for the lack thereof by using consistent descriptions. Indeed, although such cognitive operations are influenced by a subject's environment, cultural representations and goals, the contributions to this section show that hedonic value is crucial for categorizing odours. Part III (Lexical and Cultural Variation) illustrates that some languages spoken on the African continent (such as the Arabic and Bantu languages) are relatively rich in their olfactory lexicon, thereby revealing the greater attention paid to odours in these societies. That being said, such relative richness or paucity can be modulated through a variety of mechanisms which shape the linguistic output, as exemplified in Part IV (Putting Odours into Words), where the olfactory lexicons of two Indo-European languages (French and Greek) are analysed from a comparative perspective.Cambridge Scholars Publishingoai:cds.cern.ch:26676792016
spellingShingle XX
Barkat-Defradas, Melissa
Motte-Florac, Elisabeth
Words for odours: language skills and cultural insights
title Words for odours: language skills and cultural insights
title_full Words for odours: language skills and cultural insights
title_fullStr Words for odours: language skills and cultural insights
title_full_unstemmed Words for odours: language skills and cultural insights
title_short Words for odours: language skills and cultural insights
title_sort words for odours: language skills and cultural insights
topic XX
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2667679
work_keys_str_mv AT barkatdefradasmelissa wordsforodourslanguageskillsandculturalinsights
AT mottefloracelisabeth wordsforodourslanguageskillsandculturalinsights