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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article
Front. Psychol.
Sec. Perception Science
Volume 15 - 2024 |
doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1497557
This article is part of the Research Topic Crossing Sensory Boundaries: Multisensory Perception Through the Lens of Audition View all 4 articles
From Spatial Perception to Referential Meaning: Convergent Image Schemas in the Music of and Texts about Beethoven's Piano Sonatas
Provisionally accepted- University of Niš, Niš, Serbia
This paper approaches the connection between musical constructs and visuo-haptic experience through the lens of the cognitive-linguistic notion of the “image schema”. The proposal is that the subconscious inference of spatial and haptic schematic constructs in music, such as vertical movement, will motivate their equally common occurrence in the language about that music, irrespective of the fact that this language never describes the musical structure in a one-to-one fashion. We have looked for five schemas in the scores for the first ten piano sonatas by Ludwig van Beethoven and three famous analytical and pedagogical texts about them: FORCE, indicating changes in musical dynamics and referential invocation of power-related terms in the books; PATH, identifying vertical movement in the music and suggestions of upward- or downward motion in the texts; LINK, suggesting the presence or absence of musical slurs and references to attachment or detachment in the language; BALANCE, indicating the loss and regain of consonance in the harmony and invocation of lost and recovered stability in the verbal semantics; and CONTAINMENT, allocating the nonharmonic tones that “belong” to their resolving notes in the scores and referring to physical or metaphorical enclosed areas in the texts. Results of the corpus analysis suggest the following conclusions: musical schemas outnumber linguistic ones sevenfold; moderate schema strengths are typical of both language and music; predominant valences are shared by language and music in three schemas out of five; hierarchies of five schemas by strength differ, though the strongest schemas are mostly shared. Yet the central finding is that the correlations between each schema pair for music and language, by scalarity and valence, are total. This implies that (1) schemas operate as semantic building blocks irrespective of the external “symbolical form” in which they are realized and (2) scalarized image schema complexes perceived in one cognitive mode may motivate the emergence of a corresponding number of the same complexes in another.
Keywords: image schema, metaphor, Language, Music, Beethoven, spatiality
Received: 17 Sep 2024; Accepted: 13 Nov 2024.
Copyright: © 2024 Antović, Jovanović and Popović. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
* Correspondence:
Mihailo Antović, University of Niš, Niš, Serbia
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