05696oam 2200757I 450 991078618950332120230803025057.01-135-12358-61-283-97270-00-203-07608-71-135-12359-410.4324/9780203076088 (CKB)2670000000325563(EBL)1114657(OCoLC)827208967(SSID)ssj0000821747(PQKBManifestationID)11441958(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000821747(PQKBWorkID)10871987(PQKB)11321650(MiAaPQ)EBC1114657(Au-PeEL)EBL1114657(CaPaEBR)ebr10650241(CaONFJC)MIL428520(OCoLC)826652835(OCoLC)1014198350(FINmELB)ELB133402(EXLCZ)99267000000032556320180706d2013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrCorpus stylistics and Dickens's fiction /Michaela MahlbergNew York :Routledge,2013.1 online resource (237 p.)Routledge advances in corpus linguistics ;14Routledge advances in corpus linguistics ;14Description based upon print version of record.1-138-90007-9 0-415-80014-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Corpus Stylistics and Dickens's Fiction; Copyright; Contents; List of Tables, Figures, and Concordances; Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1 Corpus Stylistics; INTRODUCTION; 1.1 SHARED GROUND AND INNOVATION; 1.1.1 Foregrounding theory and corpus norms; 1.1.2 The philological and the corpus stylistic circle; 1.1.3 The stylistician's toolkit and units of description; 1.2 EXAMPLES OF CORPUS STYLISTIC WORK; 1.3 ENTERING THE CORPUS STYLISTIC CIRCLE FOR THE STUDY OF DICKENS'S FICTION; CONCLUSIONS; 2 Textual Building Blocks of Fictional Worlds; INTRODUCTION2.1 MEMORABLE CHARACTERS IN THE DICKENSIAN WORLD2.2 CHARACTERISATION AND TEXT WORLDS; 2.3 INDUCTION AND ABSTRACTION IN THE CORPUS STYLISTIC CIRCLE; 2.4 A TEXT-DRIVEN APPROACH TO TEXTUAL BUILDING BLOCKS OF FICTIONAL WORLDS; CONCLUSIONS; 3 Starting with the Texts: Corpora, Clusters, and Lexical Bundles; INTRODUCTION; 3.1 TEXTS AND CORPORA; 3.2 DEFINING AND RETRIEVING CLUSTERS-INITIAL EXAMPLES; 3.3 APPROACHES TO CLUSTERS AND FUNCTIONAL INTERPRETATIONS; 3.4 LEXICAL BUNDLES OR CLUSTERS FOR THE STUDY OF DICKENS'S FICTION?; 3.4.1 Lexical bundles in fiction; 3.4.2 Increasing the length of clustersCONCLUSIONS4 Groups of Clusters for the Identification of Local Textual Functions; INTRODUCTION; 4.1 QUANTIFYING, COMPARING, AND CLASSIFYING CLUSTERS; 4.2 KEY CLUSTERS AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF CLUSTERS ACROSS TEXTS; 4.3 AN OPERATIONAL DEFINITION OF CLUSTER GROUPS; 4.4 DISTRIBUTIONS OF CLUSTER GROUPS; 4.4.1 Cluster categories in DCorp; 4.4.2 Cluster categories in 19C; 4.5 'KEY GROUPS' OF CLUSTERS; CONCLUSIONS; 5 Character Speech; INTRODUCTION; 5.1 FUNCTIONS OF SPEECH CLUSTERS; 5.1.1 Negotiating information; 5.1.2 Turn-taking; 5.1.3 Politeness formulae; 5.1.4 First-person narration5.1.5 Contextualising and highlighting functions5.2 PHRASAL IMPOLITENESS AND CONFRONTATION; 5.3 FUNCTIONS IN CONTEXT: PICKWICKIAN CLASHES AND CONFRONTATION IN OLIVER TWIST; 5.4 VAGUE LANGUAGE AND OTHER EXAMPLES OF INTERPERSONAL MEANINGS; CONCLUSIONS; 6 Body Language; INTRODUCTION; 6.1 KORTE'S (1997) FRAMEWORK FOR THE ANALYSIS OF BODY LANGUAGE; 6.2 BODY LANGUAGE AND CHARACTERISATION; 6.3 FROM BODY PART CLUSTERS TO BODY LANGUAGE; 6.4 THE BODY LANGUAGE CLINE; 6.4.1 The 'fireplace pose'; 6.4.2 Gaze behaviour: eyes; 6.4.3 Touch behaviour and authentication: his hand upon his shoulder6.4.4 Empty body language?6.4.5 Body language functioning as labels and thematic cues; CONCLUSIONS; 7 As If and the Narrator Comment; INTRODUCTION; 7.1 CLUSTERS AND FANCIFUL MEANINGS; 7.2 COLLOCATES AND PATTERNS OF NARRATOR COMMENTS; 7.2.1 Action verbs, body part nouns, and settings; 7.2.2 Manner; 7.2.3 LOOK; 7.2.4 SPEAK; 7.2.5 Significant collocates-Extending the meaning groups; 7.3 LEXICALLY DRIVEN DESCRIPTIONS OF BODY LANGUAGE; CONCLUSIONS; 8 Labels: Contextualising and Highlighting Functions; INTRODUCTION; 8.1 GROUPS OF LABELS AND THEIR FUNCTIONS; 8.1.1 Reporting Speech Labels8.1.2 Speech LabelsThis book presents an innovative approach to the language of one of the most popular English authors. It illustrates how corpus linguistic methods can be employed to study electronic versions of texts by Charles Dickens. With particular focus on Dickens's novels, the book proposes a way into the Dickensian world that starts from linguistic patterns. The analysis begins with clusters, i.e. repeated sequences of words, as pointers to local textual functions. Combining quantitative findings with qualitative analyses, the book takes a fresh view on Dickens's techniques of characterisation, the Routledge Advances in Corpus LinguisticsCorpora (Linguistics)English languageStyleDiscourse analysis, LiteraryCorpora (Linguistics)English languageStyle.Discourse analysis, Literary.823/.8Mahlberg Michaela.624451MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910786189503321Corpus stylistics and Dickens's fiction3724500UNINA