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Chapter 13. Body memory and the emergence of metaphor in movement and speech

An interdisciplinary case study

image of Chapter 13. Body memory and the emergence of metaphor in movement and speech

The present study is an empirical documentation of body memory and the transition from implicit to explicit memory from the cognitive-linguistic, movement analytic, and philosophical perspectives in a therapeutic application. The transition from implicit memory to explicit memory is described using the concept of activated metaphoricity. It is argued that body movements executed in the absence of speech may provide the experiential source for multimodal metaphors. Tracing these bodily movements from speechless contexts to contexts encompassing speech and body movement allows for the empirical documentation of the transition from implicit body memory to explicit verbalized memory. In this chapter, these theoretical claims are substantiated from the results of an interdisciplinary case study in a dance/movement therapy context.

  • Affiliations: 1: University of Heidelberg; 2: European University Viadrina, Frankfurt (Oder)
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