LEADER 00721nam0-22002771i-450- 001 990007745660403321 035 $a000774566 035 $aFED01000774566 035 $a(Aleph)000774566FED01 035 $a000774566 100 $a20021010d--------km-y0itay50------ba 101 0 $aita 200 1 $aDroit commercial$eSocietes commerciales$fPhilippe Merle 205 $a3 ed 210 $aParis$cDalloz$d1992. 215 $aXXVII, 683 p.$d24 cm 676 $a346.07 700 1$aMerle,$bPhilippe$0277313 801 0$aIT$bUNINA$gRICA$2UNIMARC 901 $aBK 912 $a990007745660403321 952 $a13-AB-105$b5770$fDDCP 959 $aDDCP 996 $aDroit commercial$9662611 997 $aUNINA DB $aGEN01 LEADER 10590nam 2200733 a 450 001 9910971812103321 005 20240516074747.0 010 $a9786613144126 010 $a9781283144124 010 $a1283144123 010 $a9789027289155 010 $a9027289158 035 $a(CKB)2550000000039560 035 $a(SSID)ssj0000522065 035 $a(PQKBManifestationID)12230575 035 $a(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000522065 035 $a(PQKBWorkID)10527572 035 $a(PQKB)11379177 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC717675 035 $a(Au-PeEL)EBL717675 035 $a(CaPaEBR)ebr10480777 035 $a(CaONFJC)MIL314412 035 $a(OCoLC)731647054 035 $a(DE-B1597)721675 035 $a(DE-B1597)9789027289155 035 $a(EXLCZ)992550000000039560 100 $a20110323d2011 uy 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcn||||||||| 181 $ctxt 182 $cc 183 $acr 200 00$aDiscursive pragmatics /$fedited by Jan Zienkowski, Jan-Ola O?stman, Jef Verschueren 205 $a1st ed. 210 $aAmsterdam ;$aPhiladelphia $cJohn Benjamins Pub. Co.$d2011 215 $axiv, 307 p. $cill 225 1 $aHandbook of pragmatics highlights ;$vv. 8 300 $aBibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph 311 08$a9789027207852 311 08$a9027207852 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 327 $aDiscursive Pragmatics -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Preface to the series -- Acknowledgements -- Discursive pragmatics -- References -- Appraisal -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Overview -- 2.1 Attitude - the activation of positive or negative positioning -- 2.1.1 Affect -- 2.1.2 Judgement -- 2.1.3 Appreciation -- 2.1.4 Modes of activation - direct and implied -- 2.1.5 Typological criteria -- 2.1.6 The interplay between the attitudinal modes -- 2.2 Intersubjective stance -- 3. Attitudinal assessment - a brief outline -- 3.1 Affect -- 3.2 Judgement -- 3.3 Appreciation -- 4. Engagement: An overview -- 4.1 Dialogic contraction and expansion -- 4.2 Further resources of dialogic expansion -- 4.2.1 Acknowledge -- 4.2.2 Entertain -- 4.3 Further resources of dialogic contraction -- 4.3.1 Pronounce -- 4.3.2 Concur -- 4.3.3 Disclaim (Deny and Counter) -- 4.3.4 Disclaim: Deny (negation) -- 4.3.5 Disclaim: Counter -- 4.4 Engagement resources - summary -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Cohesion and coherence -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Focus on form: Cohesion -- 3. Cohesion as a condition for coherence -- 4. Focus on meaning: Connectivity -- 5. Semantic connectivity as a condition for coherence -- 6. Coherence: A general view -- 7. A hermeneutic, context and interpretation dependent view of coherence -- 8. Coherence as a default assumption -- 9. Perspectives -- References -- Critical Linguistics and Critical Discourse Analysis -- 1. Definitions -- 2. Historical note -- 3. Principles of CL -- 4. Trends -- 4.1 Social Semiotics -- 4.2 Orders of discourse' and Foucauldian poststructuralism -- 4.3 The socio-cognitive model -- 4.4 Discourse-Historical Approach -- 4.5 Lexicometry -- 4.6 Lesarten" Approach -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Enonciation -- 1. Introduction. 327 $a2. Historical overview - from the pre-theoretical to the present phase -- 2.1 Origins and the pre-theoretical phase -- 2.2 First phase: Forerunners. -- 2.2.1 Charles Bally (1865-1947) -- 2.2.2 Gustave Guillaume (1883-1960) -- 2.3 Second phase: Main theoretical foundation -- 2.3.1 Emile Benveniste (1902-1976) -- 2.4 Third phase: Modern developments -- 2.4.1 Antoine Culioli (born in 1924) -- 2.4.2 Oswald Ducrot (born in 1930) -- 2.4.3 Jacqueline Authier-Revuz (born in 1940) -- 3. Some basic notions -- 3.1 Enunciation and enunciator -- 3.2 Situation/Context -- 3.3 Subjectivity and deixis -- 3.4 Reported speech -- 3.5 Modality and modalization -- 3.6 Modalities of enunciation (modalités d'énonciation) -- 3.7 Utterance modalities (modalités d'énoncé) -- Figures of speech -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Ancient rhetoric -- 3. Contemporary treatments of FSP -- 3.1 Definition of FSP -- 3.2 Classification of FSP -- 4. Across the lines of discipline: The cognitive and communicative role of FSP -- References -- Genre -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Historical precedents -- 3. Genre research in language studies -- 3.1 Sydney school -- 3.2 New Rhetoric -- 3.3 English for Specific Purposes -- 4. Issues and debates -- 4.1 Genre as class -- 4.2 Stability of genres -- References -- Internet sources -- Humor -- 1. Introduction and definition -- 2. Referential and verbal humor -- 3. Semantics -- 3.1 The isotopy-disjunction model -- 3.2 The script-based semantic theory of humor -- 3.3 Longer' texts -- 4. The cooperative principle and humor -- 4.1 Grice and Gricean analyses -- 4.2 Humor as non-bona-fide communication -- 4.3 Relevance-theoretic approaches to humor -- 4.4 Informativeness approach to jokes -- 4.5 Two-stage processing of humor -- 5. Conversation analysis -- 5.1 Canned jokes in conversation -- 5.1.1 Preface -- 5.1.2 Telling -- 5.1.3 Response -- 5.2 Conversational humor. 327 $a5.2.1 Functional conversational analyses -- 5.2.2 Quantitative conversational analyses -- 6. Sociolinguistics of humor -- 6.1 Gender differences -- 6.2 Ethnicity and humor -- 7. Computational humor -- 8. Cognitive linguistics and humor. -- 9. Conclusion -- References -- Intertextuality -- 1. From 'literature' to 'text as a productivity which inserts itself into history' -- 2 Text linguistics on 'textuality' -- 3. Dialogism and heteroglossia in a social-diachronic theory of discourse -- 4. Volo?inov, pragmatics and conversation analysis: Sequential implicativeness and the translation of the other's perspective -- 5. Synoptic and participatory views of human activity: Bakhtin, Bourdieu, sociolinguistic legitimacy (and the body) -- 6. Natural histories of discourse: Recontextualization/entextualization and textual ideologies -- References -- Manipulation -- 1. The ancient technique of rhetoric -- 2. The twentieth-century nightmare of 'thought control' -- 3. Manipulation is not inherent in language structure -- 4. So let's look at thought and social action -- 4.1 Drumming it in -- 4.2 Ideas that spread -- 5. What might override the cheat-checker? -- 6. Conclusion: Manipulation and counter-manipulation -- References -- Narrative -- 1. Narrative as a mode of communication -- 2. Referential properties -- 3. Textual properties -- 3.1 Narrative organization -- 3.2 Narrative evaluation -- 4. Contextual properties -- References -- Polyphony -- 1. Preliminaries -- 2. Polyphony in Bakhtin's work -- 3. Polyphony in Ducrot's work -- 4. The description of the polyphonic organization of discourse -- 5. The interrelations between polyphony and other dimensions of discourse structures -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Pragmatic markers -- 1. The tradition and the present state of research on pragmatic markers -- 2. Defining the field. 327 $a3. The terminology: Pragmatic marker or discourse marker? -- 4. Classification -- 5. Pragmatic markers and multifunctionality -- 6. Theoretical approaches to the study of pragmatic markers -- 7. Methodology -- 8. Pragmatic markers in the languages of the world -- 9. The diachronic study of pragmatic markers -- 10. The contrastive study of pragmatic markers -- 11. Pragmatic markers in translation studies -- 12. Pragmatic markers in native versus non-native speaker communication -- 13. Pragmatic markers and sociolinguistic aspects -- 14. Pragmatic markers and the future -- Public discourse -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1 Multiple readings of 'publicness' -- 2. The situation-talk dialectic: 'public' as a feature of setting vs. 'public' as a feature of talk -- 2.1 Socio)linguistic markers of public discourse -- 2.2 Interaction-based approach -- 3. Goffman and the public order -- 4. Habermas and the public sphere -- 5. Transformation of the public sphere: Public discourse as mediated communication -- 5.1 The state's role in the conflation of public and private discourses in contemporary societies -- 5.2 Surveillance and control: Information exchange as a site of struggle -- 6. Pragmatic theories of information exchange and the public sphere: Towards a social pragmatics -- References -- Text and discourse linguistics -- 1. On terminology -- 2. Historical overview -- 3. Important fields of study -- 3.1 Information structure -- 3.2 Cohesion -- 3.3 Coherence -- 3.4 Grounding -- 3.5 Discourse types and genres -- 4. Other trends -- 5. Applications -- 5.1 Practical applications -- 5.2 Acquisitional and diachronic studies -- 6. Final remarks -- References -- Text linguistics -- 1. The rise of text linguistics -- 2. Some central issues -- References -- Index. 330 $aThe ten volumes of Handbook of Pragmatics Highlights focus on the most salient topics in the field of pragmatics, thus dividing its wide interdisciplinary spectrum in a transparent and manageable way. While the other volumes select specific philosophical, cognitive, grammatical, social, cultural, variational, or interactional angles, this 8th volume focuses on theories and phenomena at the level of discourse, but leaving aside conversational interaction. It provides the reader with pragmatics-oriented information on discourse analysis, critical discourse analysis and critical linguistics, as well as text linguistics and appraisal theory, while introducing other specific approaches to discourse through concepts such as polyphony, intertextuality, genre, and énonciation. Furthermore, topics such as public discourse, narrative, figures of speech, cohesion and coherence, pragmatic markers, manipulation, and humor, are all dealt with in separate chapters. The binding idea, explained in the introduction, is that ´discursive pragmatics´ may serve as a platform for a diversity of perspectives on discourse, as they have emerged not only in the language sciences but also in the humanities and social sciences in general. 410 0$aHandbook of pragmatics highlights ;$vv. 8. 606 $aDiscourse analysis 606 $aPragmatics 606 $aSemantics 615 0$aDiscourse analysis. 615 0$aPragmatics. 615 0$aSemantics. 676 $a401/.45 701 $aZienkowski$b Jan$0914953 701 $aO?stman$b Jan-Ola$0436528 701 $aVerschueren$b Jef$0158632 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910971812103321 996 $aDiscursive pragmatics$94345600 997 $aUNINA