Rethinking Urban Perception Through Linguistic Relativity a Review of Theoretical and Empirical Insights
摘要
This literature review interrogates the underexplored intersection between linguistic relativity and urban perception, proposing that language is a critical yet neglected mediator of spatial experience. While urban design and spatial theory have increasingly engaged with sensory and cognitive frameworks, they often overlook how linguistic structures shape orientation, memory, affective appraisal, and symbolic engagement with urban environments. Anchored in the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis and extended through cognitive linguistics, metaphor theory, and urban semiotics, this review synthesizes empirical and theoretical research across linguistics, psychology, geography, and urban studies. Four key mechanisms, lexical categorization, grammatical encoding, metaphorical framing, and discursive construction, are identified as primary ways through which language conditions urban perception. A critical evaluation of interdisciplinary methodologies reveals epistemic and empirical disjunctures, and calls for integrated approaches that bridge cognitive, linguistic, and spatial analysis. This paper offers a new conceptual framework to guide future research and invites urban theorists, designers, and cognitive scientists to consider language as foundational to understanding how cities are perceived, navigated, and lived.