6533b824fe1ef96bd12807c3

RESEARCH PRODUCT

L'iconicité phonologique dans les neurosciences cognitives et dans la tradition linguistique française

Luca Nobile

subject

axe3sound symbolismneuronessymbolisme phonétiqueonomatopée[ SHS.LANGUE ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguisticssynaesthesia[SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguisticssynesthésie[SHS.LANGUE] Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguisticsonomatopoeiamirror neuronsimitation

description

A significant part of the recent research in language neuropsychology and neurophysiology seems to revive the long-standing hypothesis of an originally motivated relations hip between phonetics and semantics. Even if phonological iconicity is a long neglected subject in linguistics, particularly in French linguistics of the second half of the XXth century, a long tradition of researches does exist. It can be traced back to Plato in the old age and to Leibniz in modern age, and it has important manifestations in France too. This article aims to illustrate critically the theories of phonological iconicity developed by Charles de Brosses at the age of Enlightenment (1765), by Maurice Grammont at the time of Saussure (1901, 1933) and by Jean-Peterfalvi Michel in the years of mature structuralism (1964, 1970). For each author, one provides a historical-epistemological framework of his theory, an almost exhaustive illustration of the examples and a critical evaluation of its approach from a methodological point of view. This allows to adumbrate the silhouette of a possible contemporary theory, beyond traditional difficulties and naiveties.

https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01298584/document