Understanding Cultures through Their Key Words: English, Russian, Polish, German, and Japanese

Anna Wierzbicka
4.08
49 ratings 5 reviews
This book develops the dual themes that languages can differ widely in their vocabularies, and are also sensitive indices to the cultures to which they belong. Wierzbicka seeks to demonstrate that every language has "key concepts," expressed in "key words," which reflect the core values of a given culture. She shows that cultures can be revealingly studied, compared, and explained to outsiders through their key concepts, and that the analytical framework necessary for this purpose is provided by the "natural semantic metalanguage," based on lexical universals, that the author and colleagues have developed on the basis of wide-ranging cross-linguistic investigations. Appealing to anthropologists, psychologists, and philosophers as well as linguists, this book demonstrates that cultural patterns can be studied in a verifiable, rigorous, and non-speculative way, on the basis of empirical evidence and in a coherent theoretical framework.
Genres: LinguisticsNonfictionAnthropologySociologyLanguageJapanese LiteraturePoland
328 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
19 (39%)
4 star
18 (37%)
3 star
10 (20%)
2 star
1 (2%)
1 star
1 (2%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Anna Wierzbicka

Lists with this book

Le français dans tous les sens
Fear of Flying
Brave New World
100 Books to Expand your Mind
100 books4 voters
Empires of the Word: A Language History of the World
The Language of the Goddess
Course in General Linguistics
Of linguistic interest
26 books1 voters
Cultish: The Language of Fanaticism
Sociolinguistic Patterns
The Language of Life and Death: The Transformation of Experience in Oral Narrative