1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910816584803321

Autore

Oropeza Escobar Minerva

Titolo

Represented discourse, resonance and stance in joking interaction in Mexican Spanish / / Minerva Oropeza-Escobar

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2011

ISBN

1-283-05145-1

9786613051455

90-272-8710-4

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (287 p.)

Collana

Pragmatics & beyond new series (P&BNS), , 0922-842X ; ; v. 204

Disciplina

467/.972

Soggetti

Spanish language - Dialects - Mexico

Spanish language - Discourse analysis

Dialogue analysis

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and indexes.

Nota di contenuto

Represented Discourse, Resonance and Stancein Joking Interaction in Mexican Spanish -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- 1. Introduction -- A. Review of relevant issues and theoretical approaches -- 1. Dialogicality -- 2. Repetition -- 3. Represented discourse -- 4. Humor in conversation -- 5. Dialogic syntax theory -- B. Participation and interaction -- 1. Participants -- 2. Data -- C. Approaching represented discourse in joking from a dialogic syntax perspective -- 2. Joking in ordinary conversation -- A. Joking as activity -- B. The rationality of joking activity -- C. Joking forms in ordinary conversation -- D. The dynamics of joking forms in ordinary conversation -- E.  Participation framework and participant roles  in ordinary conversation -- F. Activity, joking relationship and framing -- G. Concluding remarks -- 3. Resonance -- A. Dialogicality and collaboration in the local domains of conversation -- B. Engagement of the participants and engagement of their linguistic forms -- C. Scope, forms and resources of resonance -- 1. Scope and parameters of resonance -- 2. Resonance forms and resonance resources -- D. Concluding remarks -- 4. Represented discourse -- A. Represented discourse as an intertextual resource of resonance -- B. Dimensions of



represented discourse: Point of view, involvement and empathy -- 1. Point of view and involvement -- 2. Point of view and empathy -- C. Other dimensions of represented discourse: Voice, stance and heteroglossia -- D. Resonance involving represented discourse -- E. Represented discourse as a resource of resonance -- F. Represented discourse as a frame for resonance -- 1. Resonance involving lexical, syntactic and semantic relationships -- 2. The pervasiveness of point of view in resonant instances of represented discourse.

3. Represented discourse and participation framework -- 4. Genre features and point of view in resonant instances of represented discourse -- G. The interplay between stance and resonance involving represented discourse -- H. Resonance involving the interaction of selves as represented discourse -- I.  The role of shared knowledge in resonance involving  represented discourse -- J. Concluding remarks -- 5. Resonance, stance and represented discourse in joking interaction -- A. Stance resources in Mexican Spanish conversation -- B. Stance in joking interaction -- C. Stance and represented discourse -- D. The interplay between stance and resonance involving represented discourse -- E. Stance and resonance -- 1. Resonance and stance as related but independent phenomena -- 2. Resonance, stance and appropriateness -- 3. Resonance as activity -- 4. Evaluation as activity. Evaluative activity as a frame for resonance -- F. Concluding remarks -- 6. Conclusions -- References -- Appendix: Transcription and glossing conventions -- A. Transcription conventions -- B. Glossing conventions -- Name index -- Subject index -- Pragmatics &amp -- Beyond New Series.

Sommario/riassunto

The book provides a new angle for the study of otherwise amply discussed discourse and interactional phenomena. The new perspective consists in addressing the interconnections between resonance, stance, represented discourse and joking in Mexican conversational discourse. In so doing, it contributes to a better understanding of the interplay between collaboration, intersubjectivity and emergence, among other relevant issues. Scholars and advanced students concerned with dialogic syntax theory, stance theory and Spanish, will find the present analysis interesting and innovative. However, the writing and methodology, based on clearly discussed and presented examples from selected conversational excerpts, including graphic representations of linguistic and discourse data, makes the analysis easy to follow also to non-specialists. The book is thus interesting to a broad circle of readers, whether they are concerned with any of the issues dealt with or with their mutual connections, whether they are specialists or not.