This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Leonard Talmy is Professor Emeritus of linguistics and philosophy and Director Emeritus of the Center for Cognitive Science at the University at Buffalo in New York. Born on June 17, 1942, he received his Ph.D. in Linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1972.
He is a prominent American linguist who has helped found and develop the area of cognitive semantics. His research has covered typologies and universals of semantic structure; the interaction between semantic structure and lexical, morphological, and syntactic structure; the relation of this to discourse, diachrony, culture, and evolution; and the implications of all this material for conceptual organization and cognitive theory. His pioneering and innovative work has been highly influential globally, with over 35,000 citations of it.
His work was the basis for the first, second, and third "Talmyan Semantics Conference" in China in 2019, 2020, and 2021. He was the recipient of the 2012 Gutenberg Research Award and 10,000 Euro prize from the Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, Germany, for outstanding contributions to research in the area of linguistics. In 2011, he was honored as one of the three "Founding Fathers" of cognitive linguistics at the 10th Biannual Conference of the International Cognitive Linguistics Association. And he was elected a Fellow of the Cognitive Science Society in its 2002 inaugural selection of Fellows.
Most of his published work can be found on his website: https://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~talmy/talmy.html
See also
editBooks
edit- Toward a Cognitive Semantics (2000) -- two volumes
- The Targeting System of Language (The MIT Press, January 2018)
Published articles
edit- "The Relation of Grammar to Cognition"
- "Force Dynamics in Language and Cognition"
- "How Language Structures Space"
- "Fictive Motion in Language and `Ception'"
- "Lexicalization Patterns"
- "The Representation of Spatial Structure in Spoken and Signed Languages: a Neural Model"
- "Recombinance in the Evolution of Language"
References
editExternal links
edit- Leonard Talmy [1]