Misplaced Pages

Synaesthesia (rhetorical device)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Describing one sense in terms of another For literary depictions of the neurological condition, see Synesthesia in literature.

Synaesthesia is a rhetorical device or figure of speech where one sense is described in terms of another. This may often take the form of a simile. One can distinguish the literary joining of terms derived from the vocabularies of sensory domains from synaesthesia as a neuropsychological phenomenon.

Panchronistic tendencies

It has been suggested that, in the tradition of Romantic poetry, the sensory transfer consisting in the synaesthesic metaphor tends to be from a lower (less differentiated) sense to a higher sense. In this respect, the sequence of senses from low to high is generally taken to be touch, taste, smell, sound, then sight. This observation was named a panchronistic tendency by Stephen Ullmann since he saw the lowest levels of sense having the poorest vocabulary. Upwards transfers are thought to have strong emotional effects, but downwards transfers generally witty effects.

Rhetorical synaesthesia as simile

Examples of synaesthesic simile:

Rhetorical synaesthesia as transmodal modification

When a modifier which would normally apply to one sense is used collocating a noun evocative of another sense, this is known as transmodal modification. Examples include:

Rhetorical synaesthesia as transmodal predication

When a noun evoking one sense is linked with a predicate evoking another, this is known as transmodal predication. Examples include:

  • "My nostrils see her breath burn like a bush." (Dylan Thomas, When all my Five and Country Senses See)
  • "the silence that dwells in the forest is not so black" (Oscar Wilde, Salome)

Synaesthetic polysemy

When a linkage of two senses depends upon a pun, this is known as synaesthetic polysemy. Examples include:

"the hyacinth purple, and white, and blue,
Which flung from its bells a sweet peal anew
Of music"

— Percy Bysshe Shelley, The Sensitive Plant

References

  1. Forsyth, Mark. The Elements of Eloquence. p. 32.
  2. ^ Anderson, Earl R. (1998). A Grammar of Iconism. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. p. 199.
  3. ^ Tsur, Reuven (Spring 2007). "Issues in Literary Synaesthesia". Style. 41 (1): 30–52.
  4. ^ Ullmann, Stephen (1957). The Principles of Semantics. Oxford: Blackwell.


Stub icon

This rhetoric-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: