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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
If You Cannot Whisper: The Performative Language Of Magical Spells, Denice J. Szafran
If You Cannot Whisper: The Performative Language Of Magical Spells, Denice J. Szafran
Denice J Szafran, Ph.D.
Meaning is not primarily what a word has; it is something a word does. The basis of much Slavic folk wisdom is a belief in the inherent power of words: some utterances are taboo, others sacred. Still more words are the province of magic, a culturally contextual conceptual system within which spells, curses, and oaths are the primary vehicles utilized by a practitioner seeking to affect the world around him/her. An analysis of Austin’s and Levinson’s theories of the performative aspects of linguistic utterances can provide an explanation of how folkloric practitioners empowered their spells with conjoined magical words and …
Mandopop Under Siege: Culturally Bound Criticisms Of Taiwan's Pop Music, Marc Moskowitz
Mandopop Under Siege: Culturally Bound Criticisms Of Taiwan's Pop Music, Marc Moskowitz
Marc L. Moskowitz
No abstract provided.
Et Ego In Academia, Kirby Farrell Prof
Et Ego In Academia, Kirby Farrell Prof
kirby farrell
Denial of humankind's creaturely limits is characteristic of much literary criticism. Shakespeare consistently dramatizes the limits of language, seeking to evoke wonder or a tragic sense of madness and chaos through an overplus of meanings in paradox, irony, and wordplay that cannot be processed sequentially by imagination.