In Experiential Verbs in Homeric Greek:.A Constructional Approach Silvia Luraghi offers a comprehensive account of construction variation with two-place verbs belonging to different sub-domains of experience (including bodily sensation, perception, cognition, emotion and volitionality) in the Homeric language. Traditionally, variation is ascribed to the independent meaning of cases that mark the second argument, and explanations have focused on properties of the latter. By taking a constructional approach, the author shows that construction variation also brings about differences in the conceptualization of the subject/experiencer by pointing to different degrees of control and awareness. Variation is then shown to reflect the embodied construal of experience along with the social dimension of emotions.
Silvia Luraghi, Ph.D. (1987), University of Pavia, is Professor of Linguistics at that university. She has published extensively on Ancient Greek and Indo-European linguistics, and is associate editor of the Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics (Brill, 2014).
Preface Abbreviations List of Figures and Tables
1 Introduction
â1.1âThe Construal of Situations
â1.2âA Construction-Based View of Homeric Greek
â1.3âEmbodiment and Domains of Experience
â1.4âHomeric Greek
â1.5âOutline of the Book
2 Experiential Situations
â2.1âExperiential Situation Types
â2.2âSemantic Roles of Participants in Experiential Situations
â2.3âThe Encoding of Experiential Situations Cross-linguistically
â2.4âDiscussion
3 Argument Structure Constructions in Homeric Greek
â3.1âProperties of Constructions
â3.2âConstructions and Construction Variation with Two-Place Verbs
â3.3âComplementation in Homeric Greek
â3.4âDiscussion
4 The Ancient Greek Verb
â4.1âAspect and Tense
â4.2âVoice
â4.3âDiscussion
5 At the Edges of the Experiential Domain: Bodily Sensations and Volition
â5.1âBodily Sensations
â5.2âVolitionality and Need
â5.3âDiscussion
6 Perception
â6.1âVisual Perception
â6.2âAural Perception
â6.3âOther Types of Sensory Perception
â6.4âFrom Perception to Evidentiality
â6.5âDiscussion
8 Emotions
â8.1âVerbs of Emotion with the NomDat Construction
â8.2âVerbs of Emotion with the NomGen Construction
â8.3âVerbs of Emotion with the NomAcc Construction
â8.4âAlternating Constructions
â8.5âDative Experiencer Constructions
â8.6âDiscussion
10 Concluding Remarks
â10.1âThe Meaning of Construction Variation with Experiential Verbs
â10.2âEmbodiment and Social Setting
â10.3âThe Encoding of Experiential Situations in Homeric Greek
â10.4âConstructionsâ Productivity
â10.5âVerbal Voice
â10.6âOutlook
References Index
All interested in Ancient Greek language and linguistics, Indo-European linguistics, language typology, semantics, and in the relation between language and cognition.