Ethnopragmatics :Understanding Discourse in Cultural Context ( Applications of Cognitive Linguistics )

Publication subTitle :Understanding Discourse in Cultural Context

Publication series :Applications of Cognitive Linguistics

Author: Cliff Goddard  

Publisher: De Gruyter Mouton‎

Publication year: 2006

E-ISBN: 9783110911114

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9783110188745

Subject: H030 Semantics, Pragmatics

Keyword: pragmatics,intercultural studies,Pragmatics intercultural studies

Language: ENG

Access to resources Favorite

Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.

Description

Using cultural scripts and semantic explications, the authors show how speech practices can be contextualised and understood in terms of the values, norms and beliefs of speakers themselves. These fascinating studies cover a gamut of culturally shaped ways of speaking from settings around the world – Australia, China, Colombia, Ghana, Japan, and Singapore. The book also serves as an introduction to powerful new techniques for pragmatic analysis which have emerged from 20 years of cross-linguistic semantic research.

Key features:

  • The book presents case studies from a diverse range of languages.
  • It demonstrates how prevailing cultural attitudes, norms and beliefs can be modelled in a clear, precise and non-ethnocentric fashion.

Chapter

List of contributors

pp.:  1 – 6

List of tables

pp.:  6 – 7

Acknowledgements

pp.:  7 – 7

3. “Lift your game Martina!”: deadpan jocular irony and the ethnopragmatics of Australian English

pp.:  39 – 73

4. Social hierarchy in the “speech culture” of Singapore

pp.:  73 – 107

5. Why the “inscrutable” Chinese face? Emotionality and facial expression in Chinese

pp.:  107 – 135

6. Cultural scripts: glimpses into the Japanese emotion world

pp.:  135 – 179

7. The communicative realisation of confianza and calor humano in Colombian Spanish

pp.:  179 – 207

8. “When I die, don’t cry”: the ethnopragmatics of “gratitude” in West African languages

pp.:  207 – 239

Author index

pp.:  239 – 275

General index

pp.:  275 – 281

LastPages

pp.:  281 – 289

The users who browse this book also browse


No browse record.