ISBN:
9789027263070
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource (299 Seiten)
Edition:
21st annual installment
Series Statement:
Handbook of Pragmatics Ser 21
Series Statement:
Handbook of pragmatics online
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als Östman, Jan-Ola Handbook of Pragmatics : 2017-2018 Installment
DDC:
306.44
Keywords:
Pragmatics-Handbooks, manuals, etc
;
Electronic books
Abstract:
Intro -- Handbook of Pragmatics. 21st Annual Installment -- Editorial page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Table of contents -- Editors' note -- Acknowledgments -- User's guide -- Introduction -- The handbook format -- About the cumulative index -- Language psychology -- 1. Overview -- 2. History -- 3. Language psychology, psycholinguistics and related perspectives -- 4. Micro sociology: Ethnomethodology and conversation analysis -- 5. The macro in the micro: Discourse, conversational inference and linguistic indexicality -- 6. Perception of mental states in (inter)action -- 6.1 Social cognition perspectives -- 6.2 Studying mentalizing processes in situ -- References -- Linear Unit Grammar -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Chunking ongoing speech -- 3. Perception of boundaries -- 4. Types of chunks -- 4.1 Types of "O" elements -- 4.2 Types of "M" elements -- 5. Linear units of meaning -- 6. Conclusion -- Primary data -- References -- Truth-conditional pragmatics -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Gricean pragmatics and truth-conditional meaning -- 3. Neo-Gricean pragmatics and the division of linguistic labour -- 3.1 Horn's Q and R principles -- 3.1.1 The division of linguistic labour -- 3.1.2 What is communicated -- 3.2 Levinson's heuristics -- 3.2.1 Grice's circle and its solution -- 3.2.2 Counter-examples -- 4. Post-Gricean pragmatics, implicature and explicature -- 4.1 The domain of explicature -- 4.2 The limits of implicatures -- 4.3 The relation between semantics and pragmatics -- 4.3.1 Lexical meaning and pragmatics -- 4.3.2 Procedural meaning -- 4.3.3 Synthesis -- 5. Truth-conditional pragmatics -- 6. Conclusion: The semantics-pragmatics interface revisited -- Acknowledgment -- References -- Benedict Anderson's imagined communities -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Benedict Anderson's message -- 3. Language and identity -- 4. States need languages
Abstract:
5. Old languages, new models -- 6. Standard languages and non-standard speakers -- 8. Linguistic habitus and speaker strategies -- 9. Conclusion - imagined communities, imagined languages -- References -- Emotions -- 1. Overview -- 2. A philosophical perspective on emotion and language -- 3. A neuroscience perspective -- 4. Linguistics and emotions: A cognitive perspective under construction -- 5. The pragmatic path: Beyond meaning -- 6. Final thoughts -- Acknowledgment -- References -- Language maintenance and shift -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Statistical studies of factors influencing language maintenance and shift -- 3. Domains of use -- 4. Family language policy -- 5. Institutional support for heritage language learning and use -- 6. Challenges for language maintenance and shift research -- 7. Conclusion -- Mianzi/lian -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Conceptualizations of mianzi/lian in historical literature -- 2.1 Socio-cultural interpretations of mianzi/lian -- 2.2 Culture-specific accounts of mianzi/lian -- 3. Differentiation of Chinese face from English-based face and politeness -- 3.1 Differences between generalized concepts of face in Chinese and English -- 3.2 Differences in how face relates to politeness in Chinese and English -- 3.3 Differences of positive and negative face in Chinese and English -- 4. Reinterpreting Chinese mianzi/lian in interaction -- 4.1 Similarities and differences in mianzi/lian representations -- 4.2 Similarities and differences in orientation to the self and others -- 5. Concluding remarks -- References -- Roman Jakobson -- 1. Biography -- 2. Phonology: Phonemes and distinctive features -- 3. Morphology -- 4. Child language, aphasia, language universals -- 5. The model of communication -- 6. The essence of language: Combination -- References -- Stance -- 1. General overview -- 2. Forms and functions of stance
Abstract:
2.1 Epistemic stance -- 2.2 Affective stance -- 2.3 Stance-displaying devices beyond lexis and grammar -- 3. The stance triangle -- 3.1 Evaluation -- 3.2 Positioning -- 3.3 Alignment -- 3.4 Previous research on stance alignment -- 4. Contextualization of stance: The local-global nexus -- 4.1 The local context: Dialogicality and sequentiality -- 4.2 The global context: Indexicality and consequences -- 5. Summary and implications of stance -- References -- Style and styling -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Style and context -- 3. Style and social meaning -- 4. Performing styles: Stylization and cultural reflexivity -- 5. An example -- References -- Superdiversity -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Ideas about contact -- 3. Ideas about language, continuity, and change -- 4. Ideas about identity -- 5. Ideas about community -- 6. Ideas about approaches -- 7. Conclusion -- References -- Tactile sign languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Body position and contact in tactile signing -- 3. Question formation -- 4. Turn-taking -- 5. Feedback -- 6. Environmental information -- 7. A note on data collection -- 8. Conclusion -- References -- Cumulative index
URL:
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