VOLUME ONE: THEORY AND METHOD
The Quiet Revolution: Ron Langacker’s Fall Quarter 1977 Lectures
John Newman
The Cognitive Linguistics Enterprise: An Overview
Vyvyan Evans, Benjamin Bergen and Jörg Zinken
Cognitive versus Generative Linguistics: How Commitments Influence Results
George Lakoff
Cognitive Linguistics
Gilles Faucconier
An Introduction to Cognitive Grammar
Ronald Langacker
Why Cognitive Linguists Should Care More about Empirical Methods
Raymond Gibbs, Jr.
Why Cognitive Linguistics Requires Embodied Realism
Mark Johnson and George Lakoff
Embodiment and Experientialism
Tim Rohrer
Some Thoughts on the Boundaries and Components of Linguistics
Charles J. Fillmore
The Relation of Grammar to Cognition
Leonard Talmy
VOLUME TWO: COGNITIVE PHONOLOGY AND MORPHOLOGY
Cognitive Phonology
George Lakoff
Phonotactic Constraints in Cognitive Phonology
Riitta Välimaa-Blum
Towards a Usage-based Cognitive Phonology
Gitte Kristiansen
Word Frequency and Context of Use in the Lexical Diffusion of Phonetically Conditioned Sound Change
Joan Bybee
A Cognitive Approach to Clinical Phonology
Anna Vogel Sosa and Joan Bybee
A Connectionist Implementation of Cognitive Phonology
Deirdre Wheeler and David Touretzky
Phonological Representation of Morphological Complexity: Alternative Models (Neuro- and Psycholinguistic Evidence)
Pier Marco Bertinetto
Evaluation through Morphology: A Cognitive Perspective
Natalia Besedina
What Is a Morpheme? A View from Construction Grammar
Richard Rhodes
Metonymy in Word-Formation
Laura Janda
VOLUME THREE: COGNITIVE GRAMMAR AND SYNTAX
The Mechanisms of Construction Grammar
Charles Fillmore
Constructions in Cognitive Grammar
Ronald Langacker
Constructionist Approaches to Language
Adele Goldberg
Logical and Typological Arguments for Radical Construction Grammar
William Croft
Linguistic Gestalts
George Lakoff
Syntactic Amalgams
George Lakoff
Emergent Grammar
Paul Hopper
Metonymic Grammar
Ronald Langacker
Towards a Corpus-based Identification of Prototypical Instances of Constructions
Stefan Th. Gries
Collostructions: Investigating the Interaction between Words and Constructions
Anatol Stefanowitsch and Stefan Th. Gries
VOLUME FOUR: COGNITIVE SEMANTICS
An Alternative to Checklist Theories of Meaning
Charles Fillmore
Context, Cognition, and Semantics: A Unified Dynamic Approach
Ronald Langacker
Conceptual Metaphor in Everyday Language
George Lakoff and Mark Johnson
Metaphtonymy: The Interaction of Metaphor and Metonymy in Expressions for Linguistic Action
Louis Goossens
Force Dynamics in Language and Thought
Leonard Talmy
Conceptual Integration Networks
Gilles Fauconnier and Mark Turner
Blending and Coded Meaning: Literal and Figurative Meaning in Cognitive Semantics
Seana Coulson and Todd Oakley
Domains and Image Schemas
Timothy Clausner and William Croft
Image Schemas: From Linguistic Analysis to Neural Grounding
Ellen Dodge and George Lakoff
The Brain’s Concepts: The Role of the Sensory-Motor System in Conceptual Knowledge
Vittorio Gallese and George Lakoff
VOLUME FIVE: COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS & RELATED FIELDS
First Steps toward a Usage-based Theory of Language Acquisition
Michael Tomasello
The LAD Goes to School: A Cautionary Tale for Nativists
Ewa Dabrowska
Integrating Cognitive Linguistics and Foreign Language Teaching: Historical Background and New Developments
Antoon De Rycker and Sabine De Knop
Linguistic Selection: An Utterance-based Evolutionary Theory of Language
William Croft
Cognitive Linguistic Approaches to Literary Studies: State of the Art in Cognitive Poetics
Margaret H. Freeman
The Neuroscience of Form in Art
George Lakoff
What Does It Mean to Compare Language and Gesture? Modalities and Constrasts
Eve Sweetser
Conceptual Metaphor and the Cognitive Foundations of Mathematics
Rafael N?ñez
Neurological Evidence for a Cognitive Theory of Syntax: Agrammatic Aphasia and the Spatialization of Form Hypothesis
Paul Deane
Embodied Meaning in a Neural Theory of Language
Jerome Feldmanand Srinivas Narayanan
Cognitive Linguistics, Biology of Cognition and Biosemiotics: Bridging the Gaps
Alexander Kravchenko
Cognitive Semiotics: An Emerging Field for the Transdisciplinary Study of Meaning
Jordan Zlatev