书籍详情

话语分析(英文)

话语分析(英文)

作者:(英)Gillian Brown,(英)George Yule著;罗选民导读

出版社:外语教学与研究出版社

出版时间:2004-08-01

ISBN:9787560020068

定价:¥27.90

购买这本书可以去
内容简介
  Disourse analysis is a term which has come to have different interpretations for scholars working in different disciplines. For a sociolinguist. it is concerned mainly with the structure of social interactionmanifested in conversation; for a psycholinguist, it is primarily concerned with the nature of comprehension of short written texts; for the computational linguist, it is concerned with producing operational models of text-understanding within highly limited contexts. In this textbook, the authors provide an extensive overview of the many and diverse approaches to the study of discourse, but base their own approach centrally on the discipline which, to varying degrees, is common to them all - linguistics. Using a methodology which has much in common with descriptive linguistics, they offer a lucid and wide-ranging account of how forms of language are used in communication.Their principal concern is to examine how any language produced by man, whether spoken or written, is used to communicate for a purpose in a context. The discussion is carefully illustrated throughout by a wide variety of discourse types(conversations recorded in different social situations, extracts from newspapers, notices, contemporary fiction, graffiti, etc.). The techniques of analysis are described and exemplified in sufficient detail for the student to be able to apply them to any language in context that he or she encounters.A familiarity with elementary linguistics is assumed, but the range of issues discussed in conjunction with the variety of exemplifcation presented will made this a valuable and stimulating textbook not only for students of linguistics, but for any reader who ishes to investigate the principles underlying the use of language i natural contexts to communicate and understand intended meaning.
作者简介
暂缺《话语分析(英文)》作者简介
目录
PrefacebyHalliday
王宗炎序
导读
Preface
Acknowledgements
Transcriptionconventions
1Introduction:linguisticformsandfunctions
1.1Thefunctionsoflanguage
1.1.1Thetransactionalview
1.1.2Theinteractionalview
1.2Spokenandwrittenlanguage
1.2.1Mannerofproduction
1.2.2Therepresentationofdiscourse:texts
1.2.3Writtentexts
1.2.4Spokentexts
1.2.5Therelationshipbetweenspeechandwriting
1.2.6Differencesinformbetweenwrittenandspokenlanguage
1.3Sentenceandutterance
1.3.1On''data''
1.3.2Rulesversusregularities
1.3.3Productversusprocess
1.3.4On''context''
2Theroleofcontextininterpretation
2.1Pragmaticsanddiscoursecontext
2.1.2Reference
2.1.2Presupposition
2.1.3lmplicatures
2.1.4Inference
2.2Thecontextofsituation
2.2.1Featuresofcontext
2.2.2Co-text
2.3Theexpandingcontext
2.4Theprinciplesof''localinterpretation''andof''analogy''
3Topicandtherepresentationofdiscoursecontent
3.1Discoursefragmentsandthenotion''topic''
3.2Sententialtopic
3.3Discoursetopic
3.3.1Topicframework
3.3.2Presuppositionpools
3.3.3Sententialtopicandthepresuppositionpool
3.4Relevanceandspeakingtopically
3.5Speaker''stopic
3.6Topicboundarymarkers
3.6.1Paragraphs
3.6.2Paratones
3.7Discoursetopicandtherepresentationofdiscoursecontent
3.8Problemswiththeproposition-basedrepresentationof
discoursecontent
3.9Memoryfortext-content:story-grammars
3.10Representingtext-contentasanetwork
4''Staging''andtherepresentationofdiscoursestruc-
ture
4.1Thelinearisationproblem
4.2Theme
4.3Thematisationand''staging''
4.3.1''Staging''
4.3.2''Theme''asmaincharacter/topicentit3
4.3.3Titlesandthematisation
4.3.4Thematicstructure
4.3.5Naturalorderandpointofview
4.3.6Theme,thematisationand''staging''
5Informationstructure
5.1Thestructureofinformation
5.1.1Informationstructureandthenotion''given/new''inintonation
5.1.2Halliday''saccountofinformationstructure:informationunits
5.1.3HaUiday''saccountofinformationstructure:tonegroupsandtonics
5.1.4Identifyingthetonegroup
5.1.5Thetonegroupandtheclause
5.1.6Pause-deftnedunits
5.1.7Thefunctionofpitchprominence
5.2Informationstructureandsyntacticform
5.2.1Given/newandsyntacticform
5.2.2Informationstructureandsentencestructure
5.3Thepsychologicalstatusof''givenness''
5.3.1Whatdoes''given''mean
5.3.2Ataxonomyofinformationstatus
5.3.3Theinformationstatustaxonomyappliedtodata
5.4Conclusion
6Thenatureofreferenceintextandindiscourse
6.1Whatis''text''
6.1.1''Cohesion''
6.1.2Endophora
6.1.3Substitution
6.2Discoursereference
6.2.1Referenceanddiscourserepresentations
6.2.2Referringexpressions
6.3Pronounsindiscourse
6.3.1Pronounsandantecedentnominals
6.3.2Pronounsandantecedentpredicates
6.3.3Pronounsand''new''predicates
6.3.4Interpretingpronominalreferenceindiscourse
7Coherenceintheinterpretationofdiscourse
7.1Coherenceindiscourse
7.2Computingcommunicativefunction
7.3Speechacts
7.4Usingknowledgeoftheworld
7.5Top-downandbottom-upprocessing
7.6Representingbackgroundknowledge
7.6.1Frames
7.6.2Scripts
7.6.3Scenan''os
7.6.4Schemata
7.6.5Mentalmodels
7.7Determiningtheinferencestobemade
7.8Inferencesasmissinglinks
7.9Inferencesasnon-automaticconnections
7.10Inferencesasfillingingapsordiscontinuitiesininterpreta-tion
7.11Conclusion
References
Subjectindex
Authorindex
文库索引
猜您喜欢

读书导航