Book contents
- Metaphors in the Mind
- Metaphors in the Mind
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 ‘I Am Trying to Climb Everest in Flip-Flops.’
- 2 ‘Would You Prefer a Pencil or an Antiseptic Wipe?’
- 3 ‘I’m Running on This Soapy Conveyor Belt with People Throwing Wet Sponges at Me.’
- 4 ‘This One Sounds Like A Bell and This One Sounds Like When You’re Dead.’
- 5 ‘I Did Not Know Where I Started and Where I Ended.’
- 6 ‘Those Cookies Tasted of Regret and Rotting Flesh.’
- 7 ‘Things Come Out of My Mouth That Shouldn’t Be There.’
- 8 ‘This Is My Body Which Will Be Given Up for You.’
- 9 ‘Malodorous Blacksmiths and Lazy Livers.’
- 10 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Index
7 - ‘Things Come Out of My Mouth That Shouldn’t Be There.’
‘Altered Minds’: The Impact of Depression and Psychological Disorders on the Way People Experience the World through Metaphor
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 July 2019
- Metaphors in the Mind
- Metaphors in the Mind
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 ‘I Am Trying to Climb Everest in Flip-Flops.’
- 2 ‘Would You Prefer a Pencil or an Antiseptic Wipe?’
- 3 ‘I’m Running on This Soapy Conveyor Belt with People Throwing Wet Sponges at Me.’
- 4 ‘This One Sounds Like A Bell and This One Sounds Like When You’re Dead.’
- 5 ‘I Did Not Know Where I Started and Where I Ended.’
- 6 ‘Those Cookies Tasted of Regret and Rotting Flesh.’
- 7 ‘Things Come Out of My Mouth That Shouldn’t Be There.’
- 8 ‘This Is My Body Which Will Be Given Up for You.’
- 9 ‘Malodorous Blacksmiths and Lazy Livers.’
- 10 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Index
Summary
Chapter 7 looks at the distinctive ways in which people whose states of minds have been altered by traumatic events and psychological disorders make use of embodied metaphor. It looks at how stress, anxiety and depression affect the ways in which people experience and interact with embodied metaphor, and introduces work that has explored how people’s experience of embodied metaphor is shaped by the experience of pregnancy loss. It also focuses on psychological conditions, including autistic spectrum disorders, Asperger syndrome and schizophrenia, and explores the ways in which individuals with schizophrenia employ embodied metaphor. It draw parallels between these different states of mind and conditions and identifies common traits in terms of how they impact on the types of metaphors that people employ and the ways in which they employ them.
Keywords
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- Metaphors in the MindSources of Variation in Embodied Metaphor, pp. 150 - 175Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019