Praise and Metonymy in the Psalms

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A Cognitive-Semantic Study, Forschungen zur Religion und Literatur des Alten und Neuen Testaments 278

ISBN: 3525360940
ISBN 13: 9783525360941
Autor: Bott, Travis J
Herausgeber: Ismo Dunderberg/Hermut Löhr/Jan Christian Gertz et al
Verlag: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht
Umfang: 216 S.
Erscheinungsdatum: 19.01.2026
Auflage: 1/2026
Produktform: Gebunden/Hardback
Einband: Gebunden

This cognitive-semantic study makes a fresh contribution to the understanding of Hebrew praise language in the Psalms and devotes sustained attention to the neglected topic of metonymy in the Hebrew Bible.

A thoroughly investigation of metonymy as a cognitive process

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Artikelnummer: 8997749 Kategorie:

Beschreibung

In this study, Travis Bott makes a fresh contribution to the understanding of Hebrew praise language in the Psalms. In addition, he devotes sustained attention to the neglected topic of metonymy in the Hebrew Bible. The theoretical framework for investigating both of these topics and exploring their interaction is cognitive semantics, a major branch of the cognitive movement in contemporary linguistics. Bott defines metonymy as a cognitive process in which one entity (the vehicle) provides mental access to another perceptually contiguous entity (the target). He also draws on recent theoretical developments, such as conceptual metaphor and metonymy, metonymy as a prototypical category, metonymy in lexical polysemy, and the interaction of metaphor and metonymy in expressions (metaphtonymy). A cognitive-semantic approach to the Psalms reveals that metonymy profoundly shapes the concepts and language of Hebrew praise. Bott considers metonymy at both the lexical and contextual levels. At the lexical level, he finds that the two most important nouns for praise in the Psalms, tehillah and todah, exhibit polysemy that is governed by conceptual metonymies. In addition, at the contextual level, he treats the objects and subjects of the four most common verbs for praise in the Psalms (hll, ydh, zmr, brk). He finds that conceptual metonymies drive figurative characterizations of YHWH, the preeminent object of praise, as well as the many praising subjects of Israel. Bott demonstrates that metonymy is both more common and more varied than scholars of the Hebrew Bible have previously supposed.

Autorenporträt

Travis J. Bott, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Old Testament and Hebrew at the Nashotah House Theological Seminary in Nashotah, WI, USA.

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E-Mail: ute.schnueckel@brill.com

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