Language and Body in Place and Space
Discourse of Japanese Rock Climbing
- 256 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
Drawing on the author's experience as a sociolinguist and a mountain climber, this book shows how the expertise and affect-laden experience of Japanese rock climbers can be illuminated through linguistic methods and theories. Through a detailed investigation of multimodal interaction among climbers, the book explores a number of significant sociolinguistic and linguistic anthropological themes, including spatial frames of reference, intersubjectivity, chronotopic configurations, and poetic formations of talk. In doing so, it presents climbing as a condensed locus of human interactions in which the integrated analysis of semiotic processes brings to light a new set of relationships between humans and their surroundings. Grounded in an extended and focused participation in rock climbing activities and interviews with other climbers, Kuniyoshi Kataoka examines the assemblage of semiotic resources including the language, the body, and the space mediated by their climbing equipment and the surrounding environment. The result is a showcase of interdisciplinary multimodal approaches to climbing discourse analysis in and around the gravity-sensitive zone, ranging from expert climbers' instruction to novices, gossip and narratives on near-death experiences, to a multi-participant discussion of a critical accident. As well as demonstrating how language reflects extraordinary experiences on the vertical plane, the findings also offer a chance to learn more about climbing, which is attracting a growing number of participants and competitors worldwide.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-Title Page
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on Romanization and Transcription Conventions
- List of Abbreviations
- Glossary of Climbing Terminology
- 1 Language and Body in Place and Space
- 2 Theories and Approaches
- 3 Rock Climbing as a Site of Embodied Institution
- 4 Affordances in Rock Climbing
- 5 Ue and Shita in Horizontal and Vertical Space
- 6 The Body and Deictic Verbs of Motion in Imaginary Space
- 7 Poetic Construction of Vertical Space and Chronotopic Analysis of âFallâ Experiences
- 8 Views from Mountaineer Ethics and Deviations
- 9 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Index
- Copyright