RUSSIAN LINGUISTIC BULLETIN 1 (17) 2019
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signal for consolidating numerous but isolated efforts of various university scholars, who up until then had worked in that
direction, mainly in the field of
semantics, but without their own separate “flag”. Thus,
conceptology was formed
.
The year 1945 should be regarded as the date of birth of
contensive linguistics: this is when the fundamental new book by
I.I. Meshchaninov [11] was published; the book summarized the results of studies into “grammar categories”; even this school,
however, was at a standstill for a while, again due to political discussions. The research work continued within the field of
functional linguistics and picked up momentum after the publication of A.V. Bondarko’s
Grammatical Category and Context
[3] and S.D. Katsnelson’s
Typology of Language and Verbal Thinking [5], as well as a number of other works that followed,
and the creation of the Leningrad Academic Group for research in this direction. The key participants here were mostly
Germanists, hence the general tendency towards a
nominalist approach in their studies.
The preliminary date for the appearance of
cognitive linguistics can be recognized as that of the publication by Y.S.
Stepanov of a small book entitled
Semiotics [12], but serious research in this direction started in the Moscow Academic Group
headed by N.D. Arutyunova after 1986. In 1988, the first part of the multi-volume collective work entitled
Logical Analysis of
Language was published, which provided an impetus for further research in the field. This group included many Romance
linguists, which explains their tendency towards conceptualism as a form of cognition typical for Romance nations.
All three schools of cognitive studies developed gradually and possess their own research roots. Contensive linguistics has
developed from functional linguistics on the structural basis. Cognitive linguistics descends from the old culturological
research, touching upon the problems of mentality and culture (linguistic culturology). Conceptual linguistics is connected with
the semantic studies of the 20
th
century and is also associated with the mental research from the beginning of this century. The
studies of the 19
th
century, for instance, A.A. Potebnja’s works, correlate to all three “waves” on the principle of initial
syncretism.
Thus, the first academic school of the three, with respect to time, was
contensive linguistics (from the word “content”),
which was ahead of its time and was not appreciated; in fact, it was mercilessly discredited by its academic rivals. Contensive
linguistics first emerged as functional linguistics; this is what A.V. Bondarko himself calls his research work.
The main aim of this linguistic school was to study the
process involved in the development of meaning in a certain context
(“meaning is given form”). According to contensive linguistics,
function is an action, while
meaning is the
content of the signs.
Meanings do not exist in ready-made form; they are formed by the subject. In in this statement, we can see the first “departure”
towards cognitive science. The research focuses on
semantic categories, also known as logical
universals (initially called
“notional categories”). Since all this happens in a certain
environment, a philosophical duality takes place: grammatical
categories are seen as manifestations of the
system (for instance, aspect, time, voice, etc.) and form the
core of the semantic
field of this environment (aspectuality, temporality, and functional-semantic voice, respectively). This is not an instance of
realism, as one might have imagined taking into account the corresponding pairs like
aspect –
aspectuality. System and
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