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The poetry of sound and the sound of poetry: Navajo poetry, phonological iconicity, and linguistic relativity
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2015
Year
MusicLiterary TheoryPoetry WritingNavajo PoetryLinguistic RelativityLinguistic TheoryCognitive LinguisticsParallelism (Rhetoric)Literary CriticismPhonological IconicityLanguage StudiesLiterary StudyOral PoetryImaginative WritingImaginative PossibilitiesPoeticsPhilosophy Of LanguageArtsLinguisticsEdward Sapir ’
Abstract This article takes seriously Edward Sapir’s observation about poetry as an example of linguistic relativity. Taking my cue from Dwight Bolinger’s “word affinities,” this article reports on the ways sounds of poetry evoke and convoke imaginative possibilities through phonological iconicity. In working with Navajos in translating poetry, I have come to appreciate the sound suggestiveness of that poetry and the imaginative possibilities that are bound up in the sounds of Navajo. It seems that just such sound suggestiveness via phonological iconicity and the ways they orient our imaginations are a crucial locus for thinking through linguistic relativities.
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