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- catalog abstract ""Discourse Analysis is an ideal textbook for students taking a first course in linguistic approaches to discourse. It presupposes no previous coursework in linguistics and is designed to encourage students to think about discourse analysis as an open-ended heuristic, a set of techniques for systematically studying every possible source of the meaning of a sequence of speech or writing."--Jacket.".
- catalog contributor b12983515.
- catalog created "2002.".
- catalog date "2002".
- catalog date "2002.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "2002.".
- catalog description ""Discourse Analysis is an ideal textbook for students taking a first course in linguistic approaches to discourse. It presupposes no previous coursework in linguistics and is designed to encourage students to think about discourse analysis as an open-ended heuristic, a set of techniques for systematically studying every possible source of the meaning of a sequence of speech or writing."--Jacket.".
- catalog description "1. Introduction -- 1.1. What is Discourse Analysis? -- 1.2. Some Uses of Discourse Analysis -- 1.3. Facets of Discourse Analysis -- 1.4. Discourse and Text: The Data of Discourse Analysis -- 1.5. Transcription: Representing Speech in Writing -- 1.6. "Descriptive" and "Critical" Goals -- 2. Discourse and World -- 2.1. Linguistic Categories, Minds, and Worldviews -- 2.2. Discourse, Culture, and Ideology -- 2.3. Language Ideology -- 2.4. Silence -- 3. Discourse Structure: Parts and Sequences -- 3.1. Words and Lines -- 3.2. Turns and Moves in Conversation -- 3.3. Paragraphs and Episodes -- 3.4. Discourse Schemata and the Structure of Narrative -- 3.5. Emergent Organization of Conversation -- 3.6. Old and New Information and the Organization of Sentences -- 3.7. Cohesion -- 3.8. Structures and Rules -- 4. Speakers, Hearers, Audiences -- 4.1. Power, Solidarity, and Community -- 4.2.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. [243]-262) and index.".
- catalog description "Social Roles and Discourse Roles -- 4.3. Audience, Politeness, and Accommodation -- 4.4. Attributed Identities and Situated Identifications -- 4.5. Agency and Self-Expression -- 5. Prior Texts, Prior Discourses -- 5.1. Idea of Intertextuality -- 5.2. Repetition in Conversation -- 5.3. Register: Repeated Styles for Repeated Situations -- 5.4. Genre: Recurrent Forms, Recurrent Actions -- 5.5. Plot and Coherence -- 6. Discourse and Medium -- 6.1. Early Work on "Orality and Literacy" -- 6.2. Literacy and Literacies -- 6.3. Communication and Technology -- 6.4. Planning and Discourse Structure -- 6.5. Fixity, Fluidity, and Coherence -- 6.6. Medium and Interpersonal Relations -- 7. Discourse and Purpose -- 7.1. Speech Acts -- 7.2. Contextualization Cues and Discourse Marking -- 7.3. Rhetorical Aims, Strategies, and Styles -- 7.4. Verbal Art and Performance -- 7.5. Performances of Identity -- 8.".
- catalog description "Some General Themes -- 8.1. Heuristic Approach to Discourse Analysis -- 8.2. Locations of Meaning -- 8.3. Discourse as Strategy, Discourse as Adaptation -- 8.4. Language and Languaging -- 8.5. Particularity, Theory, and Method -- 8.6. From Text Outward.".
- catalog extent "xv, 269 p. ;".
- catalog identifier "0631208763 (alk. paper)".
- catalog identifier "0631208771 (pbk. : alk. paper)".
- catalog isPartOf "Introducing linguistics ; 3".
- catalog issued "2002".
- catalog issued "2002.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Malden, Mass. : Blackwell,".
- catalog subject "401/.41 21".
- catalog subject "Discourse analysis.".
- catalog subject "P302 .J64 2002".
- catalog tableOfContents "1. Introduction -- 1.1. What is Discourse Analysis? -- 1.2. Some Uses of Discourse Analysis -- 1.3. Facets of Discourse Analysis -- 1.4. Discourse and Text: The Data of Discourse Analysis -- 1.5. Transcription: Representing Speech in Writing -- 1.6. "Descriptive" and "Critical" Goals -- 2. Discourse and World -- 2.1. Linguistic Categories, Minds, and Worldviews -- 2.2. Discourse, Culture, and Ideology -- 2.3. Language Ideology -- 2.4. Silence -- 3. Discourse Structure: Parts and Sequences -- 3.1. Words and Lines -- 3.2. Turns and Moves in Conversation -- 3.3. Paragraphs and Episodes -- 3.4. Discourse Schemata and the Structure of Narrative -- 3.5. Emergent Organization of Conversation -- 3.6. Old and New Information and the Organization of Sentences -- 3.7. Cohesion -- 3.8. Structures and Rules -- 4. Speakers, Hearers, Audiences -- 4.1. Power, Solidarity, and Community -- 4.2.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Social Roles and Discourse Roles -- 4.3. Audience, Politeness, and Accommodation -- 4.4. Attributed Identities and Situated Identifications -- 4.5. Agency and Self-Expression -- 5. Prior Texts, Prior Discourses -- 5.1. Idea of Intertextuality -- 5.2. Repetition in Conversation -- 5.3. Register: Repeated Styles for Repeated Situations -- 5.4. Genre: Recurrent Forms, Recurrent Actions -- 5.5. Plot and Coherence -- 6. Discourse and Medium -- 6.1. Early Work on "Orality and Literacy" -- 6.2. Literacy and Literacies -- 6.3. Communication and Technology -- 6.4. Planning and Discourse Structure -- 6.5. Fixity, Fluidity, and Coherence -- 6.6. Medium and Interpersonal Relations -- 7. Discourse and Purpose -- 7.1. Speech Acts -- 7.2. Contextualization Cues and Discourse Marking -- 7.3. Rhetorical Aims, Strategies, and Styles -- 7.4. Verbal Art and Performance -- 7.5. Performances of Identity -- 8.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Some General Themes -- 8.1. Heuristic Approach to Discourse Analysis -- 8.2. Locations of Meaning -- 8.3. Discourse as Strategy, Discourse as Adaptation -- 8.4. Language and Languaging -- 8.5. Particularity, Theory, and Method -- 8.6. From Text Outward.".
- catalog title "Discourse analysis / Barbara Johnstone.".
- catalog type "text".