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Table of Contents
- Surprise at the Intersection of Phenomenology and Linguistics
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Table of contents
- Introduction
- References
- Part I. The temporality of surprise: A dynamic process opening up possibilities
- Chapter 1. Neurophenomenology of surprise
- Introduction
- Bridging biology and phenomenology
- A neurobiological model of minimal surprise
- An evolutionary approach of the persistence of surprise
- The phenomenology of minimal and persistent surprise
- On the healthy acceptance of surprise
- A neurobiological approach of the acceptance of surprise
- A neurophenomenology of extreme disruptive surprise
- Surprise beyond objectivism
- Bibliography
- Chapter 2. Shock, twofold dynamics, cascade: Three signatures of surprise. The micro-time of the surprised body
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The motor-bodily shock: An unseen unfolding
- 2. The double-stage rhythmic dynamics of body-emotion-cognition
- 3. The third signature of surprise: The ‘cascade’ as illustrating an overlapping generative process
- 4. Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 3. The representation of surprise in English and the retroactive construction of possible paths
- 0. Introduction
- 1. Theoretical perspective
- 2. Yet
- 3. Of all + plural noun
- 4. The infinitive of result only to
- Concluding remarks
- Bibliography
- Part II. Verbal interaction and action
- Chapter 4. Encoding surprise in English novels: An enunciative approach
- 1. Introduction
- 2. An enunciative approach to the encoding of surprise in English
- 3. Presentation of the written literary corpus data based on English novels: A qualitative study of surprise (lexemes and) syntactic constructions
- 4. Some grammatical means of conveying surprise
- 5. Adjusting to the new state of affairs: From loss of control to control regained
- 6. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Corpus data
- Chapter 5. How implicit is surprise?: Confronting a phenomenological description with a radical pragmatist approach
- Introduction
- Surprise is a suspension, even a reduction of the implicit lived-experience
- A pragmatical logic of surprise
- Creativity and spontaneity recovered
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Chapter 6. Surprise in native, bilingual and non-native spontaneous and stimulated recall speech
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Surprise: An emotional or a cognitive state?
- 3. Experimental research
- 4. Psycholinguistic scenario of surprise: Results of the experiment
- 5. Disrupting artistic expectations
- 6. Emotional components of the surprise experience
- 7. The metaphorical expression of surprise
- Conclusion
- References
- Software programs for transcription and analysis
- Works of art
- Part III. Emotional experience, expression and description
- Chapter 7. Interrogatives in surprise contexts in English
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Questions, speech acts and mirativity
- 3. Clarification requests
- 4. Ordinary questions
- 5. Inferential questions
- 6. Conclusion
- Acknowledgments
- References
- Tools
- Corpus data
- Chapter 8. Looking at ‘unexpectedness’: A corpus-based cognitive analysis of surprise & wonder
- 1. Corpus & background
- 2. Overview of results & resulting semantic analysis
- 3. The discourse functions of surprise & wonder: Characterizing objects of discourse
- 4. Conclusions
- Acknowledgments
- References
- Chapter 9. Is surprise necessarily disappointing?
- 1. Dissonance against harmony?
- 2. Protention versus unexpectedness?
- 3. Fulfillment or disappointment?
- References
- Index
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