Expressivity, Bodies and Language in the Twenty-First Century

Topic: Expressivity, Bodies and Language in the Twenty-First Century
Venue: University of Montpellier – Paul Valéry
Date: 20-21 November 2025
Conference organizers: Sandrine Sorlin (University of Montpellier – Paul-Valéry /IUF - EMMA) and Julie Neveux (Sorbonne University - CeLiSo)

cfp_expressivitybodieslanguage_21st_century.pdf

 

That language can affect bodies is nothing new. In How to Do Things with Words (1962), Austin theorized “perlocution” as the effects generated by the act of saying something. Perlocutionary acts do imply the presence of the body. But the nature of these bodily effects has never been thoroughly analysed, remaining at an abstract level that made it difficult to think both the corporal impact of language and the corporality of language itself. The language of emotions and emotions in language, in their representational and expressive dimensions, have begun to attract the attention of linguists (Wierzbicka 1999, Fenigsen et al 2000, Majid 2012, Lüdtke 2015, Gutzmann 2019, Alba-Juez and Mackenzie 2019, Trotzke and Villalba 2021, Rett 2021, Cotte 2023) literary scholars and stylisticians who have embarked on the ‘affective’ or ‘emotional’ turn (Keen 2007, Burke 2010, Hogan et al. 2022) and, more recently, pragmaticists (Wharton and Saussure 2023, Alba-Juez & Haugh in press). But the concrete effects of emotions and expressive language on bodies – which can be immediate or long-lasting, have lingered in the shadows of analysis.

Grounded in a post-dualist approach, this conference aims to center the body in order to shed light on how language and bodies interact and “interaffect” beyond the mere perlocutionary act of language. One of the goals is to investigate the effects of insulting, racist, homophobic, xenophobic or transphobic discourse on its targets’ bodies (as well as those of the locutors). The Black-American novelist, Claudia Rankine, poignantly evokes the body fatigue provoked by implicitly racist remarks, making the “sigh” in Citizen, An American Lyric (2014) the mode of expression of an asphyxiated and powerless body in the face of invisible microaggressions. The impact of misgendering on gender non-conforming people, of certain discourses on neurodiverse people also deserves recognition from their own embodied perspective. A cultural politics of bodily affects from a linguistic point of view is overdue to uncover how emotions affect our bodies and language and what emotions make us do and say – a continuation of the work brilliantly engaged by Sara Ahmed in The Cultural Politics of Emotion (2014).

The body is not, of course, to be severed from the mind. Cognition and emotions have been shown to be inextricably linked (Damasio 2000) and cognitive linguists, in the steps of phenomenologists such as Merleau-Ponty (1973) have highlighted the embodied grounding of linguistic constructions. For Ruthrof (2000, vi) though, they have not gone far enough in reinstating the body “at the base of linguistic communication”. Human thought is now known to be indissociable from an organism’s embedded activity. According to enactivists indeed, we experience the world with our whole bodies, “enacting” the world in an interactive engagement with it (Noë 2004, Hutto and Myin 2013, Di Paolo et al 2023). The time has come for human sciences to embrace post-dualist approaches (Lüdkte 2015). One may therefore ask how cognitive, enactive but also pragmatic theories can concretely account for the way bodies are affected and exploited by and in language when it comes to responding to environmental causes for instance or, more insidiously, believing in conspiracy theories?

The year 2016 proved to be a turning point precipitating a renewed relationship to truth (see Frankfurt 2005 on bullshit and Neveux 2024 on satirist Stephen Colbert’s coinage of ‘truthiness’ in 2006 as harbingers of the phenomenon). While the lexical formations “posttruth” and “truthiness” account for a new, more subjective and emotionally-grounded relationship to truth, the way it acts and relies on bodies has yet to be fully interrogated. The populist rhetoric and style (Moffit 2016) as exemplified in pro-Brexit discourses, strived to elicit “gut reactions” against (im)migrants. They are construed as invaders intent on stripping residents bare, tapping into the ancestral “us versus them” mindset that Lahire (2023) has shown to be central to human evolution. Is it possible to assess the effects produced by linguistic choices regarding self and other presentation in terms of embodied cognition? Can we measure the bodily impact of Trump’s hyperbolic language on both his followers and anti-Trumpians when he claims that immigrants “are eating pets in Springfield” (during the Harris-Trump presidential campaign on September 10th, 2024)? Emotions seem to be central to polarizing discursive strategies and yet to have been mostly overlooked in politics (Wolak and Sokhey 2022, Shah 2022).

Body and therapy through language is another field welcomed by this conference as it will focus on the effects of language – in particular metaphorical devices – on bodies and also how pained/hurting bodies affect language in return (Steen 2022, Colston et al 2023, Liu et al. 2024, Lugea 2022, Semino 2023). Positive emotions (joy, gratitude, hope) as studied in psychology (see Fredrikson 2001 among others) also need further linguistic investigation. If psychology has long concentrated on negative emotions (fear, guilt, sadness, etc.), experimental research has demonstrated the benefits of activating positive emotions on health, cognitive abilities and well-being. The sciences of language would perhaps benefit from a crossdisciplinary perspective between language/interactions and positive emotions. This conference will thus seek to assess what this research can bring to pragma-linguistic and discourse analysis, by focusing on the bodily effects of certain speech acts (compliments, flattery, etc.), of polite and generous discourse on the bodies of those who receive them as well as those who produce them: how good can words make us feel? What kind of language triggers empathy, defined as perspectival alignment? Can empathetic language “take care” of bodies as it may have done during the Covid 19-related pandemic that compelled people to remain at a safe bodily distance? This two-day event will consider all contributions addressing “in the flesh” effects and characteristics of language, highlighting the way bodies can be affected by – or pulled into – linguistic forms, whether negatively, positively, or else, with an eye to assessing in turn the impact of such bodily effects on decision-making and/or state of mind (Bottineau 2008). The sources of analysis need to be language-based (discourse of any genre or interactions of any kind) but the corpora can be found on a wide variety of media (online discourse, forums, interviews, fictional discourse, etc.).

Approaches from specialists of discourse analysis, pragmatics, stylistics, cognitive linguistics, but also enactivism, (social) psychology, sociology, anthropology, political science and philosophy in connection with discourse or interactions are all welcome.

Language of the conference: English
Selected papers will be considered for publication
Website: under construction
Deadline for submission: 3 March 2025
Notification of acceptance: 15 April 2025
Proposals of around 300 words to be sent to sandrine.sorlin@univ-montp3.fr and julie.neveux@sorbonne-universite.fr, along with a short bio.

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Laura Alba-Juez (Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Madrid, Spain)
Ezequiel A. Di Paolo (Ikerbasque, the Basque Foundation for Science, Spain)
Christopher Hart (Lancaster University, UK)

SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE
Kristy Beers Fägersten (Södertörn University, Sweden)
Agnès Celle (Paris Cité University, France)
Elena Clare Cuffari (Worcester State University, USA)
Nathalie Blanc (University of Montpellier - Paul Valéry ; France)
Massimiliano Demata (Università di Torino, Italy)
Monique de Mattia-Viviès (Aix-Marseille University, France)
Masha Esipova (Bar-Ilan University, Israel)
Christopher Hart (Lancaster University, UK)
Patrick Colm Hogan (University of Connecticut, USA)
Anne Lacheret-Dujour (Nanterre University, France)
Jean-Jacques Lecercle (Nanterre University, France)
Jean-Rémi Lapaire (University of Bordeaux Montaigne, France)
Jane Lugea (Queen University Belfast, Ireland)
Louis de Saussure (University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland)
Elena Semino (Lancaster University, UK)
Arielle Syssau (University de Montpellier - Paul Valéry, France)
Jordan Zlatev (Lund University, Sweden)

REFERENCES
Ahmed, Sara. 2014. The Cultural Politics of Emotion. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
Alba-Juez, Laura, J.L. Mackenzie & J. Lachlan. 2019. Emotion in Discourse. Amsterdam : John Benjamins Publishing Company.
Alba-Juez, Laura & Michael Haugh (eds.) (in press). The Sociopragmatics of Emotion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Austin, John Langsham. 1975[1962] How to Do Things with Words. Clarendon Press.
Bottineau, Didier. 2008. “Language and enaction”. Stewart, J., Gapenne, O. & Di Paolo, E. Enaction: Towards a New Paradigm for Cognitive Science, 1-67. MIT. halshs-00339894
Burke, Michael. 2010. Literary Reading, Cognition and Emotion: An Exploration of the Oceanic Mind. London, New York: Routledge.
Cotte, Pierre, 2023. La motivation dans la langue. Recherches en Linguistique anglaise. Volume 1, éd. Laure Gardelle. Paris : PUS.
Damasio, Antonio. 2000. The feeling of what happens. Body, emotion and the making of consciousness. London: Vintage.
Di Paolo, Ezequiel A., Elena Clare Cuffari & Hanne De Jaegher. 2023. Linguistic Bodies: The Continuity between Life and Language. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Fenigsen, Janina, James M. Wilce & Revekah Wilce. 2020. The Routledge Handbook of Language and Emotion. London, New York: Routledge.
Fredrickson, Barbara L. 2001. “The role of positive emotions in positive psychology. The Broaden-and-Build Theory of positive emotions”. Am Psychol 56(3): 218–226.
Gutzmann, Daniel. 2019. The Grammar of Expressivity. Oxford Studies in Theoretical Linguistics. Oxford : Oxford University Press.
Hart, Christopher. 2024. Language, Image, Gesture. The Cognitive Semiotics of Politics. Cambridge: CUP.
Hogan, Patrick Colm, Bradley J. Irish, Lalita Pandit Hogan. 2022. The Routledge Companion to Literature and Emotion. London and New York: Routledge.
Hutto, Daniel & Myin, Erik. 2013. Radicalizing Enactivism: Basic Minds without Content. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Keen, Suzanne. 2007. Empathy and the Novel. Oxford: OUP.
Lahire, Bernard. 2023. Les Structures fondamentales des sociétés humaines. La Découverte.
Liu, Yufeng, Elena Semino, Judith Rietjens & Sheila Payne. 2024. “Cancer experience in metaphors: patients, carers, professionals, students: A scoping review”. BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care.
Lüdtke, Ulrike M. (ed.). 2015. Emotion in Language. Theory – research – application. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company.
Lugea, Jane. 2022. “Dementia mind styles in contemporary narrative fiction”. Language and Literature 32.2. https://doi.org/10.1177/09639470221090
Majid, Asifa. 2012. “Current emotion research in the language sciences”. Emotion Review,4(4), 432–443. https://doi.org/10.1177/1754073912445827.
Merleau-Ponty, Maurice. 1973. The Prose of the World. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press.
Moffitt, Benjamin. 2016. The Global Rise of Populism: Performance, Political Style, and Representation. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
Neveux, Julie. 2024. “From productive -ness word-formation to creative suffix -iness: The case of truthiness”. In Laure Gardelle, Elise Mignot and Julie Neveux (eds.), Nouns and the Morphosyntax/ Semantics Interface, 415-444. Basingstoke : Palgrave Macmillan.
Noë, Alva. 2004. Action in Perception. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Rankine, Claudia. 2014. Citizen. London, New York: Penguin.
Rett, Jessica. 2021. “The Semantics of Emotive Markers and Other Illocutionary Content”. Journal of Semantics, 38: 305–340.
Ruthrof, Horst. 2000. The Body in Language. London and New York: Cassell.
Semino, Elena. 2023. “Communicating research on metaphor and illness”. In Hazel Price & Dan McIntyre (eds.), Communicating Linguistics. London: Routledge.
Shah, Tamanna M. 2022. “Emotions in politics: A review of contemporary perspectives and trends”, 74.1: 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1177/00208345241232769
Wharton, Tim and Louis de Saussure. 2023. Pragmatics and Emotion. Cambridge: CUP.
Wierzbicka, Anna. 1999. Emotions across Languages and Cultures. Diversity and Universals. Cambridge: CUP.
Wolak Jennifer and Anand Edward Sokhey. 2022. “Enraged and engaged? Emotions as motives for discussing politics”. American Politics Research 50.2 : 186–198.

Dernière mise à jour : 18/11/2024