UID:
almafu_9959233990202883
Umfang:
1 online resource (295 p.)
Ausgabe:
1st ed.
ISBN:
1-282-15214-9
,
9786612152146
,
90-272-9147-0
Serie:
Pragmatics & beyond new series ; 167
Inhalt:
This study concerns the nature of impoliteness in face-to-face spoken interaction. For more than three decades many pragmatic and sociolinguistic studies of interaction have considered politeness to be one central explanatory concept governing and underpinning face-to-face interaction. Politeness' "evil twin" impoliteness has been largely neglected until only very recently. This book, the first of its kind on the subject, considers the role that impoliteness has to play by drawing extracts from a range of discourse types (car parking disputes, army and police training, police-public interactions and kitchen discourse). The study considers the triggering of impoliteness; explores the dynamic progression of impolite exchanges, and examines the way in which such exchanges come to some form of resolution. 'Face' and the linguistic sophistication and manipulation of discoursally expected norms to cause, or deflect impoliteness is also explored, as is the dynamic and sometimes hotly contested nature of an individual's socio-discoursal role.
Anmerkung:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
,
Impoliteness in Interaction -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Acknowledgements -- Preface -- 1. Impoliteness in interaction -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The scope of the present book -- 1.3 Motivation for the book: Why is the phenomena of impolitenessworth investigating? -- 1.4 Aims of the book -- 1.5 Concerning the data -- 1.6 Outline of the book -- 2. Implicature -- 2.1 Grice's cooperative principle -- 2.2 Sperber and Wilson's relevance theory -- 3. Face within a model of im/politeness -- 3.1 An early conceptualisation of face as related to modelsof im/politeness -- 3.2 Issues with early conceptualisations of face -- 3.3 The dualism perspective -- 3.4 The 'universality' of positive and negative face -- 3.5 A return to Goffman? -- 4. Perspectives on politeness and impoliteness -- 4.1 Social norm politeness -- 4.2 Conversational maxim politeness -- 4.3 Politeness: The face management view -- 4.4 Impoliteness and types of face threat -- 4.5 Impoliteness -- 4.6 Models of impoliteness and aggravation -- 4.7 Conclusion -- 5. The realisation of impoliteness -- 5.1 Realisations of impoliteness -- 5.2 Sarcasm/mock politeness -- 5.3 Withholding politeness -- 5.4 Strategies from Culpeper (1996) not realised in the corpus -- 5.5 Utterances not covered by Culpeper's (1996) strategies -- 5.6 A more complex example of impoliteness -- 5.7 Other considerations -- 5.8 Conclusion -- 6. The dynamics of impoliteness I -- 6.1 Utterance 'beginnings' -- 6.2 Utterance 'middles' -- 6.3 Utterance 'ends' -- 6.4 Conclusion -- 7. The dynamics of impoliteness II -- 7.1 Discourse 'beginnings' -- 7.2 Discourse 'middles' -- 7.3 Discourse 'ends' -- 7.4 Other considerations -- 7.5 Conclusion -- 8. The dynamics of impoliteness III -- 8.1 Impoliteness and the turn-taking system.
,
8.2 Considering the concepts of 'turn' and 'floor' with respectto impoliteness -- 8.3 Interruptions -- 8.4 Impoliteness, preference organization and conducive questions -- 8.5 Conclusion -- 9. Conclusion -- 9.1 A general summary of the book -- 9.2 Reviewing the research questions -- 9.3 The limitations to the present study -- 9.4 Areas for future research -- References -- Index.
,
English
Weitere Ausg.:
ISBN 90-272-5411-7
Sprache:
Englisch
Bookmarklink