This article explores the linguo-cognitive modeling of the relationship between life and death in literary texts
through a comparative analysis of selected works from English and Karakalpak literature of the twentieth century. It delves
into how cognitive mechanisms and language interplay to shape metaphoric and symbolic perceptions of life and death,
revealing the unique worldviews and cultural consciousness of both literary traditions. By examining key authors, motifs,
and narrative strategies, the study highlights distinctive and overlapping models of representing life and death, thus contributing
to our understanding of cognitive linguistics in a multicultural literary context
Publication Date: 2026-06-16