Emotion in dialogic interaction : advances in the complex / / edited by Edda Weigand |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamin Pub., c2004 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (296 pages) |
Disciplina | 401/.41 |
Altri autori (Persone) | WeigandEdda |
Collana | Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Series IV, Current issues in linguistic theory |
Soggetto topico |
Dialogue analysis - Psychological aspects
Psycholinguistics Emotions |
ISBN |
1-282-16054-0
9786612160547 90-272-9563-8 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
EMOTION IN DIALOGIC INTERACTION -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC page -- Table of contents -- List of Contributors -- Foreword -- Part I. Addressing the Complex -- Emotions -- 1. The challenge of the complex -- 2. What emotions really are: New findings, new questions -- 3. Emotions and language -- 3.1. Words and concepts -- 3.2. Utterances and speech acts -- 3.3. Principles of emotion -- 4. Conclusion: From patterns to adaptive human behaviour -- References -- Universality vs. Culture-Specificity of Emotion -- 1. Man and emotion -- 2. Emotion vs. cognition -- 3. Operating of emotions -- 4. Classification of emotion -- 5. Dimensions and culture-specific aspects of emotion -- 6. ``No word - no feeling?'' -- 7. The envoy -- References -- Emotions in Language and Communication -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The study of emotions in poetics and stylistics -- 3. Premises following the stylistic analysis -- 4. Emotions in political debates -- 5. Discussion of emotional choices: Are there emotionless dialogues? -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Emotions, Language, and Context -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 2. The complexity of emotions -- 2.1. Mixed features of emotions -- 2.2. The `compositional' nature of emotions -- 3. The interlacing of emotions and context -- 3.1. Local and global context -- 3.2. Correlation and variables -- 3.3. The range of linguistic devices for expressing emotions -- 3.4. The interactional development of emotions -- Notes -- References -- Body, Passions and Race in Classical Theories of Language and Emotion -- 1. Introduction: Shylock's questions and Wollock's argument -- 2. The passions in The Merchant of Venice -- 3. Aristotle and Epicurus on the passions and language -- 4. Aristotelian, Epicurean and Christian answers to Shylock -- 5. Later answers, from Descartes and Locke to Renan -- 6. Conclusions -- Notes -- References.
Part II. Communicative Means for Expressing Emotions -- Interjections in a Contrastive Perspective* -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Definition and delimitation of the term interjection -- 3. Interjections and indexicality -- 4. Methods to study interjections -- 5. Interjections in English - interjections in Swedish -- 6. Interjections in English-reaction signals in Swedish -- 7. Interjections in English-conjunctions in Swedish -- 8. Conclusion -- Notes -- Primary Sources (from ESPC) -- -- References -- Appendix 1 -- Appendix 2 -- When Did We Start Feeling Guilty? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Dictionary evidence -- 2.1. Guilt and what it means -- 2.2. Shame in the context of guilt -- 2.3. Guilt and semantically related words -- 2.4. Words and terms -- 3. Feelings as first-person experiences -- 4. Shame and guilt in psychology and cultural anthropology -- 5. Guilt feelings before 1850? -- 6. The emergence of Schuldgefühl -- 7. The emergence of guilt feelings in European literature -- 8. Guilt feelings in contemporary discourse -- References -- Joy, Astonishment and Fear in English, German and Russian -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Astonishment in German and Russian: E. T. A. Hoffmann vs. N. Gogol -- 2.1. -- 2.2. -- 2.3. -- 3. Joy in Russian and in English: F. Dostoevsky vs. Ch. Dickens -- 3.1. Clichés -- 3.2. Clustering -- 3.3. Most frequent types of contexts of use -- 3.4. Epithets of joy and radost' -- 4. Conclusion -- References -- Ambivalence as a Dialogic Frame of Emotions in Conflict -- 1. What it looks like being ambivalent: A pair of examples -- 2. Emotion and ambivalence -- 3. Ambivalence as a psychological phenomenon -- 3.1. Feeling, emotion and ambivalence: The phenomenon of mixed emotions -- 3.2. The internal structure of ambivalent emotions. 3.3. How can I ascribe to myself two mutually contradictory emotions at one and the same time (and remain an identical I)? -- 4. Language and ambivalent emotions -- 4.1. The meaning and use of the word ambivalence -- 4.2. Ambiguity, polysemy, antonymy, homonymy, and ambivalent meanings: An example -- 4.3. Further exploration of antonymy as a linguistic phenomenon vs. ambivalence as a psychological phenomenon -- 4.4. Ambivalent frames juxtaposed to converse antonyms (buy-sell) -- 5. The social psychological determinants of ambivalence -- 5.1. Socially motivated opposites in experience -- 5.2. The ambivalence-creating multiculturalism -- 6. Representing the `other' with Turkish loan words in Bulgarian -- 6.1. The styles and social registers of language and the position of negatively and ambivalently loaded Turkish loan words -- 6.2. Ecce homo or imaging psychological types in Turkish loans -- 6.3. The Freudian unconscious in Turkish loans -- 6.4. The vanity fair of communicative interaction in the mirror of the Turkish loans -- 6.5. Patterns of ambivalence in intercultural transfer -- 7. Turkish ambivalent loans as internalization of a previous intercultural conflict -- 8. Conclusions -- References -- Part III. Emotional Principles in Dialogue -- The Role of Emotions in Normative Discourse and Persuasion -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The role of emotions in paralinguistic communicative behavior -- 2.1. The uniqueness of communicative events -- 2.2. Non-verbal communicative conventions -- 3. The role of emotions in normative discourse and social control -- 3.1. Normative discourse is based on concepts of should and ought -- 3.2. Evaluation and prescription in normative discourse -- 4. The role of emotions in normative discourse -- 4.1. The macrostructure of normative discourse -- 4.2. Invoking norms or themes of high emotive content. 4.3. Lexical choice in discourse -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Anticipation of Public Emotions in TV Debates -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Emotions as orientations in dialogic interaction -- 3. Political TV-debates as dialogic action games -- 4. Politics, the media society and emotions -- 5. Sample Analysis -- 5.1. The format of the debate -- 5.2. Emotions and evasion -- 5.3. Strategic hiding of emotions -- 5.4. Polarization vs. appeal to solidarity -- 6. Violation of the formal rules -- 7. Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Appendix -- Interpreting Emotions in Literary Dialogue -- 1. Introducing the problem -- 2. The text -- 3. Constructing emotional values from meta-talk -- 3.1. Naming emotions -- 3.2. Constructing emotions through co-textual gapfilling -- 3.3. Culture dependent connotations -- 4. Questioning the narrator's sincerity -- 4.1. Reasoning patterns -- 4.2. Matter-of-fact style: information and rhythm -- 4.3. Explicitation -- 5. Coda -- 6. Concluding remarks -- Notes -- Sources -- References -- The Author-Reader-Text Emotional Bond in the Literary Action Game -- 1. Preface -- 2. From sensations to emotions - language games and action games -- 3. The emotional plot -- 4. Three external components of the literary action game -- 4.1. The universal factor -- 4.2. Particular and indexical factors -- 4.3. Beyond the novel: The author-as-person's external role in the action game -- 5. Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- On the Inseparability of Emotion and Reason in Argumentation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Emotion, passion, mood, affect, sentiment -- 2.1. Passion, mood, affect, sentiment -- 2.2. Emotions: state and process -- 3. Four ways to emotions -- 4. Cursing the government -- 4.1. Experiencers -- 4.2. Emotions embedded in the situation -- 4.3. Allocated emotions -- 4.4. Rage -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- General Index. The Current Issues in Linguistic Theory series. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910825050903321 |
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamin Pub., c2004 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Structural-functional studies in English grammar [[electronic resource] ] : in honor of Lachlan Mackenzie / / edited by Mike Hannay [and] Gerard J. Steen |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamin Pub., c2007 |
Descrizione fisica | vi, 393 p |
Disciplina | 410.1/8 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
HannayMichael
SteenGerard MackenzieJ. Lachlan |
Collana | Studies in language companion series |
Soggetto topico |
Functionalism (Linguistics)
English language - Grammar |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-282-15471-0
9786612154713 90-272-9259-0 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910454539903321 |
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamin Pub., c2007 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Structural-functional studies in English grammar [[electronic resource] ] : in honor of Lachlan Mackenzie / / edited by Mike Hannay [and] Gerard J. Steen |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamin Pub., c2007 |
Descrizione fisica | vi, 393 p |
Disciplina | 410.1/8 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
HannayMichael
SteenGerard MackenzieJ. Lachlan |
Collana | Studies in language companion series |
Soggetto topico |
Functionalism (Linguistics)
English language - Grammar |
ISBN |
1-282-15471-0
9786612154713 90-272-9259-0 |
Classificazione | 18.04 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910782167303321 |
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamin Pub., c2007 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Structural-functional studies in English grammar : in honor of Lachlan Mackenzie / / edited by Mike Hannay [and] Gerard J. Steen |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamin Pub., c2007 |
Descrizione fisica | vi, 393 p |
Disciplina | 410.1/8 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
HannayMichael
SteenGerard MackenzieJ. Lachlan |
Collana | Studies in language companion series |
Soggetto topico |
Functionalism (Linguistics)
English language - Grammar |
ISBN |
1-282-15471-0
9786612154713 90-272-9259-0 |
Classificazione | 18.04 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Structural-Functional Studies in English Grammar -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Introduction -- References -- Corpus-based studies -- No doubt and related expressions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. A synchronic perspective -- 2.1. No doubt -- 2.2. There is no doubt -- 2.3. I have no doubt -- 2.4. A comparison of no doubt, there is no doubt and I have no doubt -- 3. A diachronic excursion -- 4. Discussion -- References -- On certainly and zeker -- 1. Introduction -- 2. What we do and do not know about certainly and zeker -- 3. The data: Sources and selection criteria -- 4. The analysis -- 4.1. The epistemic use -- 4.2. The scalar use -- 4.3. The strengthening use -- 4.4. The pragmatic use -- 5. Conclusions -- References -- Prenominal possessives in English -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Traditional accounts: Interacting principles -- 3. Some earlier accounts -- 3.1. The search for a single underlying principle -- 3.2. Interactive principles: Rosenbach (2002) -- 4. The present study -- 4.1. A multifunctional approach -- 4.2. Non-prototypical prenominal possessives: Some examples -- 4.3. Postnominal possessors: Some examples -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Ditransitive clauses in English with special reference to Lancashire dialect -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The two canonical patterns of encoding -- 3. Variation on the canonical patterns -- 4. Patterns of argument encoding in Lancashire dialect -- 5. Theoretical relevance of findings -- References -- 'It was you that told me that, wasn't it?' -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Material and methods -- 3. Formal features -- 4. Semantic features -- 5. Discourse-cognitive features -- 5.1. Informative values -- 5.2. The interactive dimension -- 5.3. Opinion-giving devices -- 6. Distribution across ICE-GB text types -- 7. Conclusion -- References -- Another take on the notion Subject.
1. Introduction -- 2. Subject in a grammar of English -- 3. Towards an encompassing framework for Subject -- 4. Some complex cases of Subject assignment -- 5. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- References -- The modal auxiliaries of English, '257-operators in Functional Grammar and ``grounding'' -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Criteria for grammaticalization and the modal auxiliaries of English -- 2.1. Criteria for grammaticalization -- 2.2. English modals and grammaticalization -- 3. Pi-operators and modality in Functional Grammar -- 3.1. Pi-operators -- 3.2. Modals and modality in Dik (1997) -- 4. Grounding -- 4.1. Grounding: A basic notion in Cognitive Grammar -- 4.2. Grounding and the English modals in Cognitive Grammar -- 5. Grounding as an argument for a graded view of the grammaticalization status of the English modals -- 5.1. Grounding and tense -- 5.2. Subjectified, grounding uses of the central modals -- 5.3. Non-subjectified, non-grounding uses of the central modals -- 5.4. Transitional uses (interpenetration of tense and modality) -- 5.5. The shift from non-grounding to grounding: The diachronic development of must -- 6. Implications -- 6.1. Implications for Cognitive Grammar -- 6.2. Implications for Functional Grammar -- 6.3. Envoi -- References -- The king is on huntunge -- 1. The scope of the paper -- 2. Progressive and Absentive -- 3. Absentive properties of constructions with a verbal noun -- 3.1. Esse in venatione glossed by be on huntunge -- 3.2. The verbal noun was an abstract noun -- 3.3. The spatial and temporal use of on -- 3.4. The combination with ridan and owt -- 3.5. Marking Figure or Ground -- 3.6. Class of verbs -- 3.7. Preliminary conclusions -- 4. Discussion -- 5. Conclusions -- References -- Sources -- The architecture of functional models -- Mental context and the expression of terms within the English clause. 1. Introduction -- 2. Terms, context and interaction -- 2.1. The classification of context -- 2.2. The contextual level -- 2.3. The formulation and interpretation of terms -- 3. Temporal and spatial satellite terms -- 3.1. The expression of adpositional terms -- 3.2. A first alternative -- 3.3. A second alternative -- 3.4. A third alternative -- 4. Conclusion -- References -- Adverbial conjunctions in Functional Discourse Grammar -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Adverbial conjunctions -- 2.1. Adverbial clauses -- 2.2. Adverbial conjoining -- 2.3. Conjunctions and adpositions -- 2.4. Conjunctions and conjunctional phrases in English -- 3. Functional Discourse Grammar -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. The interpersonal level -- 3.3. The representational level -- 3.4. Heads, modifiers, operators, functions -- 4. Conjunctions at the representational level -- 5. Conjunctions at the interpersonal level -- 6. Conclusions -- References -- Tree tigers and tree elephants -- 1. Introduction -- 2. An overview of ENCs -- 2.1. Linguistic theories of ENCs -- 3. Psycholinguistic accounts -- 3.1. The Dual-Process model -- 3.2. The CARIN model -- 3.3. The C3 model -- 3.4. Summary -- 4. The ENC construction -- 4.1. Construction Grammar -- 4.2. Relation ENCs -- 4.3. Property ENCs -- 4.4. Opaque phrasal ENCs -- 4.5. Overview -- 4.6. Psychological adequacy -- 4.7. For further investigation -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- English constructions from a Dutch perspective -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The way construction -- 3. The time-away-construction -- 4. Causative constructions -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Notes towards an incremental implementation of the Role and Reference Grammar semantics-to-syntax linking algorithm for English -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Semantics, morphosyntax and the lexicon in RRG -- 3. Incrementality in language processing. 4. A dynamic implementation of the RRG linking algorithms -- 5. Some problematic issues -- 6. A more complex example of dynamic implementation of the linking algorithms -- 7. A note on the possibility of parallel processing -- 8. Conclusion -- References -- Grammar, flow and procedural knowledge -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Linguistic structure as a result of functional differentiation -- 3. Slots as basic functional-structural interface units: External and internal function -- 4. Layered clause structure as procedural knowledge -- 5. The limits of incrementality -- 6. A case for simultaneity of interaction, representation and expression in grammar: Choice of subject and fronted objects -- 7. Formulaic language -- 8. Grammatical and other units in online communication -- 9. Conclusion -- References -- The non-linearity of speech production -- 1. Morphophonological processing -- 2. The role of prehensions in speech production and comprehension -- References -- A speaker/hearer-based grammar -- 1. Linguistic assumptions -- 2. A speaker/hearer-based grammar -- 3. The case of possessives -- 4. Novel compounds -- 5. Concluding remarks -- References -- Index -- The Studies in Language Companion Series. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910816635403321 |
Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamin Pub., c2007 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|