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Logology (linguistics)

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Logology is the field of recreational linguistics, an activity that encompasses a wide variety of word games and wordplay. The term is analogous to the term "recreational mathematics."

Some of the topics studied in logology are lipograms, acrostics, palindromes, tautonyms, isograms, pangrams, bigrams, trigrams, tetragrams, transdeletion pyramids, and pangrammatic windows.

The term logology was formerly used to refer to the science of word studies[1] but was adopted by Dmitri Borgmann to refer to recreational linguistics.[2]

Logology deals with the verbal nature of doctrines in suggesting a further possibility that there may be analogies between "logology" and Theology.[3] According to literary theorist Kenneth Burke, logology works through the forms of religious language and its functions in the political sphere when rhetoric acts as a symbolic action. If it is true that language is symbolic, then speech is the result of man acting as a symbol-using animal, making it necessary to understand that logology can also be defined as the study of "words about words." [4]

In rhetoric, logology focuses not in finding the truth or falseness of a statement or phrase, but rather why that particular word or string of words was chosen and how those choices influenced the way those words were interpreted and understood by the receiver.[5] There is a belief that there is an analogy between the words chosen and the word that those words expresses.[6]

For example, if theology is discourse concerning God, then it must be noted that there is a difference between "God" and the word "God." In relating the definition of logology to the term "theology," it then becomes clear that the correct meaning of theology is not "words about God" but instead "words about the word God."[7]

Logologists

Bibliography

  • Bombaugh, C.C. (1961). Oddities and Curiosities of Words and Literature. New York: Dover. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Borgmann, Dmitri (1965). Language on Vacation: An Olio of Orthographical Oddities. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  • Eckler, Ross A. Jr. (1997). Making the Alphabet Dance: Recreational Wordplay. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-15580-8.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Logology n. 2". Oxford English Dictionary Online. Oxford University Press. {{cite web}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Missing or empty |url= (help)
  2. ^ Farrell, Jeremiah. "Word Ways: The Journal of Recreational Linguistics". Retrieved 3 July 2011.
  3. ^ Burke, Kenneth. The Rhetoric of Religion; Studies in Logology. Berkeley: University of California, 1970. Print.
  4. ^ Berg, Herbert. Method & Theory in the Study of Religion. Berlin: Mouton De Bruyter, 2002. Print.
  5. ^ Singh, Surjit. The Rhetoric of Religion: Studies in Logology by Kenneth Burke. Review. 4th ed. Vol. 3. Religious Research Association, Inc., Spring 1964. Web. <http://www.jstor.org/stable/3510454>.
  6. ^ Maddux, Kristy. "Finding Comedy in Theology: A Hopeful Supplement to Kenneth Burke's Logology." Philosophy & Rhetoric 39.3 (2006): 208-10. Print.
  7. ^ Burke, Kenneth. "Dramatism And Logology." Communication Quarterly 33.2 (1985): 89-93. Communication & Mass Media Complete. Web. 22 Oct. 2013