Produktbild: The Handbook of Discourse Analysis

The Handbook of Discourse Analysis

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

07.09.2001

Herausgeber

Schiffrin Deborah + weitere

Verlag

Wiley

Seitenzahl

872

Maße (L/B/H)

25,1/17,9/5,3 cm

Gewicht

1597 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-631-20595-1

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

07.09.2001

Herausgeber

Verlag

Wiley

Seitenzahl

872

Maße (L/B/H)

25,1/17,9/5,3 cm

Gewicht

1597 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-631-20595-1

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: The Handbook of Discourse Analysis
  • Contributors.

    Introduction: Deborah Schiffrin (Georgetown University), Deborah Tannen (Georgetown University) and Heidi Hamilton (Georgetown University).

    Part I: Discourse Analysis and Linguistics:.

    1. Intonation and Discourse: Current Views from Within: Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen (University of Konstanz).

    2. Cohesion and Texture: Jim Martin (University of Sydney).

    3. Discourse Markers: Language, Meaning and Context: Deborah Schiffrin (Georgetown University).

    4. Discourse and Semantics: Neal Norrick (Saarland University).

    5. Discourse and Relevance Theory: Diane Blakemore (Southampton University).

    6. Discourse and Information Structure: Gregory Ward and Betty Birner (Northwestern University).

    7. Historical Discourse Analysis: Laurel Brinton (University of British Columbia).

    8. Typology and Discourse: John Myhill (University of Haifa).

    9. Register Variation: A Corpus Approach: Douglas Biber (Northern Arizona University) and Susan Conrad.

    Part II: The Linking of Theory and Practice in Discourse Analysis:.

    10. Nine Ways of Looking at Apologies: The Necessity of Interdisciplinary Theory and Method in Discourse Analysis: Robin Lakoff (University of California, Berkeley).

    11. Interactional Sociolinguistics: A Personal Perspective: John Gumperz (University of California, Berkeley).

    12. Discourse as an Interactional Achievement III: The Omnirelevance of Action: Emanuel Schegloff (University of California, Los Angeles).

    13. Discourse and Interaction: Monica Heller (University of Toronto).

    14. The Linguistic Structure of Discourse: Livia Polanyi (FX Palo Alto Lab).

    15. The Variationist Approach Towards Discourse Structural Effects and Socio-Interactional Dynamics: Sylvie DuBois (Louisiana State University) and David Sankoff (Université de Montréal).

    16. Computer-Assisted Text and Corpus Analysis: Lexical Cohesion and Communicative Competence: Michael Stubbs (University of Trier).

    17. The Transcription of Discourse: Jane Edwards (University of California, Berkeley).

    Part III: Discourse: Language, Context, and Interaction:.

    Political, Social, and Institutional Domains:.

    18. Critical Discourse Analysis: Teun van Dijk (University of Amsterdam).

    19. Discourse and Racism: Ruth Wodak (Universität Wein) and Martin Reisigl.

    20. Political Discourse: John Wilson (University of Ulster).

    21. Discourse and the Media: Colleen Cotter (Georgetown University).

    22. Discourse Analysis in the Legal Context: Roger Shuy (Georgetown University).

    23. The Discourse of Medical Encounters: Nancy Ainsworth-Vaughn (Michigan State University).

    24. Language and Medicine: Suzanne Fleischman (University of California, Berkeley).

    25. Discourse in Educational Settings: Carolyn Adger (Temple University).

    26. Institutional Narratives: Charlotte Linde (Institute for Research on Learning).

    Culture, Community, and Genre:.

    27. Discourse and Intercultural Communication: Ronald and Suzanne Scollon (Georgetown University).

    28. Discourse and Gender: Shari Kendall and Deborah Tannen (Georgetown University).

    29. Discourse and Aging: Heidi Hamilton (Georgetown University).

    30. Child discourse: Jenny Cook-Gumperz (University of California, Santa Barbara) and Amy Kryatzis (University of California, Santa Barbara).

    31. Computer-Mediated Discourse: Susan Herring (University of Texas).

    32. Discourse and Narrative: Barbara Johnstone (Carnegie Mellon University).

    33. Discourse and Conflict: Christina Kakavá (Mary Washington College).

    Part IV: Discourse Across Disciplines:.

    34. The Analysis of Discourse Flow: Wallace Chafe (University of California, Santa Barbara).

    35. The Discursive Turn in Social Psychology: Rom Harré (Linacre College, Oxford and Georgetown University).

    36. Discourse and Language Teaching: Elite Olshtain (Hebrew University) and Marianne Celce-Murcia (University of California, Los Angeles).

    37. Discourse Analysis in Communication: Karen Tracy (University of Colorado).

    38. Discourse and Sociology: Sociology and Discourse: Allen Grimshaw (Indiana University).

    39. Imagination in Discourse: Herb Clark and Mija VanDerWege (both Stanford University).

    40. Literary Pragmatics: Jacob Mey (Odense University).

    41. Computational Perspectives on Discourse and Dialogue: Bonnie Webber (University of Pennsylvania).

    Index.