|
The following papers have appeared in PRAGMATICS so far. (Volume 2 is out of print; all others still available.)
1:1. (March 1991)
Dan I. Slobin, Learning to think for speaking: Native language, cognition, and rhetorical style, 7-25. Maya Hickmann & David Warden, Children's strategies when reporting appropriate and inappropriate speech events, 27-70. John W. Du Bois, Transcription design principles for spoken discourse research, 71-106. Angeliki Athanasiadou, The discourse function of questions, 107-122. 1:2. (June 1991) Kenneth William Cook, The Samoan cia suffix as an indicator of agent defocusing, pp. 145-167. J. Lachlan MacKenzie & M. Evelien Keizer, On assigning pragmatic functions in English, pp. 169-215. Ad Foolen, Metalinguistic negation and pragmatic ambiguity: Some comments on a proposal by Laurence Horn, pp. 217-237. 1:3. (September 1991) Charlotte Linde, What's next?: The social and technological management of meetings, 297-317. Edith L. Bavin, The acquisition of Warlpiri kin terms, 319-344. Renata Testa, Negotiating stories: Strategic repair in Italian multi-party talk, 345-370. Senko K. Maynard, Pragmatics of discourse modality: A case of the Japanese emotional adverb Doose, 371-392. 1:4. (December 1991) Marcyliena H. Morgan, Indirectness and interpretation in African American women's discourse, 421-451. Maria Rosa Baroni, Valentina D'Urso, and Massimo Pascotto, Memory for dialogue in different modes of interaction, 453-464. Joan A. Argente and Lluís Payrató, Towards a pragmatic approach to the study of languages in contact: Evidence from language contact cases in Spain, 465-480 . Michael Meeuwis, A pragmatic perspective on contact-induced language change: Dynamics in interlinguistics, 481-515. 2:1. (March 1992) Stephen C. Levinson, Primer for the field investigation of spatial description and conception, 5-47. Begoña Vicente, Metaphor, meaning, and comprehension, 49-62 . 2:2. (June 1992) Marco Jacquemet, "If he speaks Italian it's better": Metapragmatics in court, 111-126. Misato Tokunaga, Dichotomy in the structures of honorifics of Japanese, 127-140. Salikoko S. Mufwene, Ideology and facts on African American English, 141-166. 2:3 (September 1992) SPECIAL ISSUE: Language ideologies edited by Paul Kroskrity, Bambi Schieffelin & Kathryn Woolard
Kathryn A. Woolard, Language ideology: Issues and approaches, 235-249. Judith T. Irvine, Ideologies of honorific language, 251-262. Jane H. Hill, "Today there is no respect": Nostalgia, "respect" and oppositional discourse in Mexicano (Nahuatl) language ideology, 263-280. Don Kulick, Anger, gender, language shift and the politics of revelation in a Papua New Guinean village, 281-296. Paul V. Kroskrity, Arizona Tewa Kiva speech as a manifestation of linguistic ideology, 297-309. Michael Silverstein, The uses and utility of ideology: Some reflections, 311-323. Elizabeth Mertz, Linguistic ideology and praxis in U.S. law school classrooms, 325-334. Debra Spitulnik, Radio time sharing and the negotiation of linguistic pluralism in Zambia, 335-354. Jan Blommaert & Jef Verschueren, The role of language in European nationalist ideologies, 355-375. Susan U. Philips, A Marx-influenced approach to ideology and language: Comments, 377-385. Charles L. Briggs, Linguistic ideologies and the naturalization of power in Warao discourse, 387-404. James Collins, Our ideologies and theirs, 405-415. J. Joseph Errington, On the ideology of Indonesian language development: The state of a language of state, 417-426. Bambi B. Schieffelin & Rachelle Charlier Doucet, The "real" Haitian Creole: Metalinguistics and orthographic choice, 427-443. Susan Gal, Multiplicity and contention among ideologies: A commentary, 445-449.
This issue (like the other issues of volume 2) is no longer available from IPrA, but it was turned into a book:
Bambi B. Schieffelin, Kathryn A. Woolard & Paul V. Kroskrity, 1998, Language ideologies: Practice and theory. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 338 pp. ISBN: 0-19-510562-1 (For ordering information, contact OUP at http://www.oup-usa.org
2:4 (December 1992)
Asha Tickoo, On preposing and word order rigidity, 467-486. Kathryn Shields-Brodber, Dynamism and assertiveness in the public voice: Turn-talking and code-switching in radio talk shows in Jamaica, 487-504. Henk Haverkate, Deictic categories as mitigating devices, 505-522. 3:1 (March 1993) Helmut Gruber, Political language and textual vagueness, 1-28. Janet Fuller, Hearing between the lines: Style switching in a courtroom setting, 29-43. 3:2 (June 1993) Edmund A. Anderson, Speech levels: The case of Sundanese, 107-136. Ingjerd Hoëm, Space and morality in Tokelau, 137-154. Joachim Leilich, Intentionality, speech acts, and communicative action: A defense of J. Habermas' & K.O. Apel's criticism of Searle, 155-170. Walter De Mulder, Intentionality and meaning: A reaction to Leilich's "Intentionality, speech acts and communicative action", 171-180. Charles Goodwin, Recording human interaction in natural settings, 181-209. 3:3 (September 1993) Keith Sawyer, The pragmatics of play: Interactional strategies during children's pretend play, 259-282. Susanne Günthner, German-Chinese interactions: Differences in contextualization conventions and resulting miscommunication, 283-304. Kevin McKenzie & Toine van Teeffelen, Taking the higher ground between West and Middle East: The discursive achievement of meta-perspective in representations of the Arab Other, 305-331. Alessandro Duranti, Beyond Bakhtin or the dialogic imagination in academia, 333-340. 3:4 (December 1993) Robin Tolmach Lakoff, Lewis Carroll: Subversive pragmaticist, 367-385. Jack Bilmes, Ethnomethodology, culture, and implicature - Toward an empirical pragmatics, 387-409. Elizabeth Keating, Correction/repair as a resource for co-construction of group competence, 411-423. Chao-chih Liao and Yu-hwei E. Lii-Shih, University undergraduates' attitudes on code-mixing and sex stereotypes, 425-449. 4:1 (March 1994) Todd Squires, A discourse analysis of the Japanese particle sa, 1-29. Cecilia E. Ford and Junko Mori, Causal markers in Japanese and English conversations: A cross-linguistic study of interactional grammar, 31-61. Christine Cheepen, The pragmatics of friendliness and user-friendliness, 63-79. Daniel C. O'Connell and Sabine Kowal, Some current transcription for spoken discourse: A critical analysis, 81-108. 4:2 (June 1994) Andrew Goatly, Register and the redemption of relevance theory - The case of metaphor, 139-181. Beatrice Lamiroy, Pragmatic connectives and L2 acquisition: The case of French and Dutch, 183-201. Margaret Field, On the internalization of language and its use: Some functional motivations for other-correction in children's discourse, 203-220. Laura Miller, Japanese and American meetings and what goes on before them: A case study of co-worker misunderstanding, 221-238. Jacob L. Mey, How to do good things with words: A social pragmatics for survival, 239-263. 4:3 (September 1994) SPECIAL ISSUE:Critical perspectives on intercultural communication edited by Michael Meeuwis
Michael Meeuwis & Srikant Sarangi, Perspectives on intercultural communication: A critical reading, 309-313. Dennis Day, Tang's dilemma and other problems: Ethnification processes at some multicultural workplaces, 315-336. Shi-Xu, Discursive attributions and cross-cultural communication, 337-355. David P. Shea, Perspective and production: Structuring conversational participation across cultural borders, 357-389. Michael Meeuwis, Leniency and testiness in intercultural communication: Remarks on ideology and context in interactional sociolinguistics, 391-408. Srikant Sarangi, Intercultural or not? Beyond celebration of cultural differences in miscommunication analysis, 409-427. 4:4 (December 1994) Jon F. Pressman, Pragmatics in the late twentieth century: Countering recent historiographic neglect, 461-489. Song Mei Lee-Wong, Imperatives in requests: Direct or impolite - observations from Chinese, 491-515. Michael A. Locher and Stanton E.F. Wortham, The cast of the news, 517-533. Susan Meredith Burt, Code choice in intercultural conversation: Speech accommodation theory and pragmatics, 535-559. Angeliki Athanasiadou, The pragmatics of answers, 561-574. Anna Giannetti, Business communication plans and strategies: Texts, tasks and tools, 575-598. 5:1 (March 1995) Susanne Günthner and Hubert Knoblauch, Culturally patterned speaking practices - the analysis of communicative genres, 1-32. Maria Rosa Solé Planas, The process of children's ability to ask questions from an interactive perspective, 33-44. Grahame Bilbow, Requesting strategies in the cross-cultural business meeting, 45-55. 5:2 (June 1995) SPECIAL ISSUE: Constructing languages and publics edited by Susan Gal & Kathryn Woolard
Susan Gal and Kathryn A. Woolard, Constructing languages and publics: Authority and representation, 129-138. Judith Irvine, The family romance of colonial linguistics: Gender and family in nineteenth-century representations of African languages, 139-153. Susan Gal, Lost in a Slavic sea: Linguistics theories and expert knowledge in 19th century Hungary, 155-166. Richard Bauman, Representing Native American oral narrative: The textual practices of Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, 167-183. Michael Silverstein, From the meaning of meaning to the empires of the mind: Ogden's Orthological English, 185-195. Jane Hill, Junk Spanish, covert racism and the (leaky) boundary between public and private spheres, 197-212. Joseph Errington, State speech for peripheral publics in Java, 213-224. Bambi B. Schieffelin, Creating evidence: Making sense of written words in Bosavi, 225-243. Jacqueline Urla, Outlaw language: Creating alternative public spheres in Basque radio, 245-261. Ben Lee, Performing the people, 263-280.
This issue was later turned into a book:
Susan Gal & Kathryn Woolard, 2001, Languages and Publics: The Making of Authority. Manchester: St.Jerome, 194 pp. ISBN: 1-9000650-42-8 (For ordering information, contact St Jerome Publishing at http://www.stjerome.co.uk.)
5:3 (September 1995)
Helen R. Abadiano, Cohesion strategies and genre in expository prose: An analysis of the writing of children of ethnolinguistic cultural groups, 299-324. Helena Calsamiglia, Josep M. Cots, Clara Lorda, Luci Nussbaum, Lluís Payrato, Amparo Tuson, Communicative strateties and socio-cultural identities, 325-339. Gerald P. Delahunty, The inferential construction, 341-364. Lenore Grenoble, Spatial configurations, deixis and apartment descriptions in Russian, 365-385. 5:4 (December 1995) Maria Rosa Baroni and Chiara Nicolini, Natural conversations in males and females: Conversational styles, content recall and quality of interaction, 407-426. Kuniyoshi Kataoka, Affect in Japanese women's letter writing: Use of sentence-final particles ne and yo and orthographic conventions, 427-453. Luisa Martin Rojo and Javier Callejo Gallego, Argumentation and inhibition: Sexism in the discourse of Spanish executives, 455-484. Ben Rampton, Language crossing and the problematisation of ethnicity and socialisation, 485-513. 6:1 (March 1996) Andreas H. Jucker and Sara W. Smith, Explicit and implicit ways of enhancing common ground in conversations, 1-18. Marcello Panese, Calling in: Prosody and conversation in radio talk, 19-87. M.K.C. Uwajeh, Is `May I ask you a question?', 89-109. 6:2 (June 1996) Bruce Fraser, Pragmatic markers, 167-190. Marcella Bertuccelli Papi, Insinuating: The seduction of unsaying, 191-204. Agnes Weiyun He, Narrative processes and institutional activities: Recipient guided storytelling in academic counseling encounters, 205-216. Dennis Kurzon, The maxim of quantity, hyponymy and Princess Diana, 217-227. 6:3 (September 1996) SPECIAL ISSUE: Interaction-based studies of language edited by Cecilia Ford & Johannes Wagner
Cecilia E. Ford and Johannes Wagner, Interaction-based studies of language: Introduction, 277-279. Gene H. Lerner, On the place of linguistic resources in the organization of talk-in-interaction: `Second person' reference in multi-party conversation, 281-294. Peter Auer, The pre-front field in spoken German and its relevance as a gramaticalization position, 295-322. Susanne Günthner, From subordination to coordination? Verb-second position in German causal and concessive constructions, 323-356. Margret Selting, On the interplay of syntax and prosody in the constitution of turn-constructional units and turns in conversation, 357-388. Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen, Intonation and clause-combining in discourse: The case of because, 389-426. Cecilia E. Ford, Barbara A. Fox and Sandra A. Thompson, Practices in the construction of turns: The "TCU" revisited, 427-454. 6:4 (December 1996) Katsuya Kinjo, An indecent call from a man: Narrative as revelation of framework, 465-489. Marcia Macaulay, Asking to ask: The strategic function of indirect requests for information in interviews, 491-509. Satoko Suzuki, Incorporation of information and complementizers in Japanese, 511-551. 7:1 (March 1997) Catherine Kerbrat-Orecchioni, A multilevel approach in the study of talk-in-interaction, 1-20. Ron Kuzar, Split word, split subject, split society, 21-54. Dariusz Galasinski, The making of history: Some remarks on politicians' presentation of historical events. 55-68. Jan Blommaert, Whose background? Comments on a discourse-analytic reconstruction of the Warsaw Uprising, 69-81. Dariusz Galasi½ski, Background and discourse analysis: A response to Jan Blommaert, 83-87. 7:2 (June 1997) Eddy Roulet, A modular approach to discourse structures, 125-146. Cliff Goddard, The semantics of coming and going, 147-162. Kazuko Matsumoto, NPs in Japanese conversation, 163-181. Yael Maschler, Discourse markers at frame shifts in Israeli Hebrew talk-in-interaction, 183-211. 7:3 (September 1997) Pamela S. Morgan, Self-presentation in a speech of Newt Gingrich, 275- 308. Sabine Kowal & Daniel C. O’connell, Theoretical ideals and their violation: Princess Diana and Martin Bashir in the BBC interview, 309-324. Astrid Berrier, Four-party conversation and gender, 325-366. Hiroaki Tanaka, In other words and conversational implicature, 367-388. Gwon-Jin Choi, Viewpoint shifting in Korean and Bulgarian: the use of kinship terms, 389-396. Anna M. Guthrie, On the systematic deployment of okay and mmhmm in academic advising sessions, 397-415. 7:4 (December 1997) SPECIAL ISSUE: Conflict and violence in pragmatic research edited by Charles Briggs
Charles L. Briggs, Introduction: From the ideal, the ordinary, and the orderly to conflict and violence in pragmatic research, 451-460. Asif Agha, Tropic aggression in the Clinton-Dole presidential debate, 461-498. Jan Blommaert, The slow shift in orthodoxy: (Re)formulations of ‘integration’ in Belgium, 499-518. Charles L. Briggs, Notes on a "Confession": On the construction of gender, sexuality, and violence in an infanticide case, 519-546. John B. Haviland, Shouts, shrieks, and shots: Unruly political conversations in indigenous Chiapas, 547-574. Patricia E. O’Connor, "You gotta be a man or a girl": Constructed dialogue and reflexivity in the discourse of violence, 575-600. Maria Eugenia Villalón and Sandra Angeleri, The practice of retort: Exchanges leading to the Caracas peace dialogues, 601-624. Michael Silverstein, Commentary: Achieving adequacy and commitment in pragmatics, 625-634. 8:1 (March 1998) Greg Matoesian, Discursive hegemony in the Kennedy Smith rape trial: Evidence of an age graded allusion in expert testimony, 3-20. Helmut Gruber, Computer-mediated communication and scholarly discourse: Forms of topic-initiation and thematic development, 21-46. Roni Henkin, Narrative styles of Palestinian Bedouin adults and children, 47-78. Theodossia Pavlidou, Greek and German telephone closings: Patterns of confirmation and agreement, 79-94. 8:2 (June 1998) SPECIAL ISSUE: Clinical interviews as verbal interactions edited by Michèle Grossen & Anne Salazar Orvig
Michèle Grossen and Anne Salazar Orvig, Clinical interviews as verbal interactions: A multidisciplinary outlook. Introduction, 149-154 Lorenza Mondada, Therapy interactions: Specific genre or "blown up" version of ordinary conversational practices? 155-166 Anne salazar Orvig, Interpreting and diverging in clinical interviews, 167-184 Nadine Proia, Analysis of a first therapy interview: Objectives and methods, 185-202 Annie Chalivet and Marie-Madeleine De Gaulmyn, Speech therapy for elderly people: Construction of coherency, 203-220 Wilma Minoggio, Institutional talk in referral meetings, 221-238 Michèle Grossen and Denis Apothéloz, Intelligence as a sensitive topic in clinical interviews prompted by learning difficulties, 239-254 Alain Trognon, Interactional pragmatics of hypnotic induction, 255-270 Amina Bensalah, Self-representation by auto-portrait in research interviews, 271-286 Christian Hudelot, To pursue the discussion without concluding, 287-293 8:3 (September 1998) Jack Sidnell, Collaboration and contestation in a dispute about space in an Indo-Guyanese village, 315-338. Tessa Carroll and Judy Delin, Written instructions in Japanese and English: A comparative analysis, 339-385. Song Mei Lee-Wong, Face support - Chinese particles as mitigators: A study of BA A/YA and NE, 387-404 . Grahame T. Bilbow and Sylvester Yeung, Learning the pragmatics of 'successful' impression management in cross-cultural interviews, 405-417. 8:4 (December 1998) Dell Hymes, When is oral narrative poetry?Generative form and its pragmatic conditions, 475-500. Kumiko Murata, Has he apologized or not?: A cross-cultural misunderstanding between the UK and Japan on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of VJ Day in Britain, 501-514. David Bell, Cancellative discourse markers: A core/periphery approach, 515-542. Camille Hanlon and Joann Silverberg, Semantic and pragmatic aspects of set-relational reference in Modern Indo-European languages, 543-554. Kenneth C.C. Kong, Politeness of service encounters in Hong Kong, 555-575. 9:1 (March 1999) SPECIAL ISSUE: Ideologies of politeness edited by Manfred Kienpointner
Manfred Kienpointnner, Foreword, 1-4 Richard Watts, Language and politeness in early eighteenth century Britain, 5-20. Gudrun Held, Submission strategies as an expression of the ideology of politeness: Reflections on the verbalization of social power relations, 21-36. Nieves Hernández Flores, Politeness ideology in Spanish colloquial conversations: The case of advice, 37-49. Shigeko Okamoto, Situated politeness: Coordinating honorific and non-honorific expressions in Japanese conversations, 51-74. Renate Rathmayr, Métadiscours et réalité linguistique: L’exemple de la politesse russe, 75-95. Marina Terkourafi, Frames for politeness: A case study, 97-117. Robert Arundale, An alternative model and ideology of communication for an alternative to politeness theory, 119-153. Peter Klotz, Politeness and political correctness: Ideological implications, 155-161. Gino Eelen, Politeness and ideology: A critical review, 163-173.
9:2 (June 1999)
Samuel Gyasi Obeng, Grammatical pragmatics: Power in Akan judicial discourse, 199-229. Karen L. Adams, Deliberate dispute and the construction of oppositional stance, 231-248. Thomas Bearth, The inferential gap condition, 249-280. Ming-chung Yu, Universalistic and culture-specific perspectives on variation in the acquisition of pragmatic competence in a second language, 281-312.
9:3 (September 1999)
Marianna Chodorowska-Pilch, On the polite use of vamos in Peninsular Spanish, 343-356. Kofi Agyekum , The pragmatics of Duab ‘Grievance imprecation' taboo among the Akan, 357-382. Hiroaki Kitano, On interaction and grammar: Evidence from one use of the Japanese demonstrative are (‘that'), 383-400.
9:4 (December 1999)
Gabriele Klewitz and Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen, Quote - unquote? The role of prosody in the contextualization of reported speech sequences, 459-486. Francisco Yus, Misunderstandings and explicit/implicit communication, 487-518. Silvia Bruti, In fact and infatti: The same, similar or different, 519-534. Bethan Benwell, The organisation of knowledge in British tutorial discourse: Issues, pedagogic discourse strategies and disciplinary identity, 535-566. Marta Gràcia and María José Galván, Naturalistic intervention in the development of children=s communicative and linguistic skills, 567-584. Tim Hassall, Request strategies in Indonesian, 585-605.
10:1 (March 2000)
SPECIAL ISSUE: Art and the expression of complex identities: Imagining and contesting ethnicity in performance edited by Valentina Pagliai and Marcia Farr
Richard Bauman, Language, identity, performance, 1-5. Lida Dutkova-Cope, Texas Czech folk music and ethnic identity, 7-37. Alexandra Jaffe, Comic performance and the articulation of hybrid identity, 39-59. Marcia Farr, ¡A Mi No Me Manda Nadie! Individualism and identity in Mexican Ranchero Speech, 61-85. Gloria Nardini, When husbands die: Joke-telling in an Italian Ladies' Club in Chicago, 87-97. Peter C. Haney, Sol, sombra, y media luz: History, parody, and identity formation in the Mexican American carpa, 99-123. Valentina Pagliai, Lands I came to sing: Negotiating identities and places in the Tuscan "Contrasto", 125-146.
10:2 (June 2000)
Benjamin Bailey, Social/interactional functions of code switching among Dominican Americans, 165-193. Carmen Gregori-Signes, The tabloid talkshow as a quasi-conversational type of face-to-face interaction, 195-213. Marysia Johnson, Interaction in the oral proficiency interview: Problems of validity, 215-231. Steve Nicolle, Communicated and non-communicated acts in relevance theory, 233-245. Daniel C. O'Connelland Sabine Kowal, Are transcripts reproducible?, 247-269.
10:3 (September 2000)
Jonathan Charteris-Black, Figuration, lexis and cultural resonance: A corpus based study of Malay, 281-300. Gerald Delahunty and Laura Gatzkiewicz, On the Spanish inferential construction ser que, 301-322. Alexandra Georgakopoulou and Marianna Patrona, Disagreements in television discussions: How small can small screen disagreements be?, 323-338.
10:4 (December 2000)
Michael Tomasello, The social-pragmatic theory of word learning, 401-413. Csaba Pleh, Modularity and pragmatics: Some simple and some complicated ways, 415-438. Jef Verschueren, Notes on the role of metapragmatic awareness in language use, 439-456. Christina Wasson, Caution and consensus in American business meetings, 457-481.
11:1 (March 2001)
Auli Hakulinen, Minimal and non-minimal answers to yes-no questions, 1-16. Mirjana Miskovic, The particle baš in contemporary Serbian, 17-30. William Turnbull, An appraisal of pragmatic elicitation techniques for the social psychological study of talk: The case of request refusals, 31-71.
11:2 (June 2001)
Maya Hickmann, Language and cognition in development: Old questions, new directions, 105-126. Marianna Achugar, Piropos as metaphors for gender roles in Spanish speaking cultures, 127-137. Song Mei Lee-Wong, Coherence, focus and structure: The role of discourse particle NE, 139-153. Steven Cushing, Critique of puerile reason: A pragmatic look at argumentation in J.P. Moreland's The Creation Hypothesis, 155-192.
11:3 (September 2001) Scott Saft, Displays of concession in University Faculty Meetings: Culture and interaction in Japanese, 223-262. Leena Tomi, Critical analysis of American representations of Russians, 263-283. Shi-Xu and Manfred Kienpointner, The reproduction of culture through argumentative discourse: Studying the contested nature of Hong Kong in the international media, 285-307. Robin Tolmach Lakoff, The rhetoric of the extraordinary moment: The concession and acceptance speeches of Al Gore and George W. Bush in the 2000 presidential election, 309-327.
11:4 (December 2001) Dyonisis Goutsos, Sequential and interpersonal aspects of English and Greek answering machine messages, 357-377. Arlene Harvey, Relational clauses in English technical discourse: Patterns of verb choice, 379-400. Ritva Laury, Definiteness and reflexivity: Indexing socially shared experience, 401-420. Véronique Traverso, Syrian service encounters: A case of shifting strategies within verbal exchange, 421-444.
12:1 (March 2002) Anna-Marie R. Spinos, Daniel C. O'Connell and Sabine Kowal, An empirical investigation of pause notation, 1-10. Katrijn Maryns and Jan Blommaert, Pretextuality and pretextual gaps: On de/refining linguistic inequality, 11-30. Kofi Agyekum, The communicative role of silence in Akan, 31-52.
12:2 (June 2002) Michael HAUGH, The intuitive basis of implicature, 117-134. Rosina MARQUEZ REITER, A contrastive study of indirectness in Spanish: Evidence from Uruguayan and peninsular Spanish, 135-151. Tomoyo TAKAGI, Contextual resources for inferring unexpressed referents in Japanese conversation, 153-182. Yuan YI, Compliments in Kunming Chinese, 183-226.
12:3 (September 2002) Jennifer ALBER, Daniel C. O'CONNELL and Sabine KOWAL, Personal perspective in TV news interviews, 257-271. Eleni ANTONOPOULOU and Kiki NIKIFORIDOU, Deictic motion and the adoption of perspective in Greek, 273-295. Malcolm A. FINNEY, Effects of Spanish pragmatic and lexical constraints in the interpretation of L2 English anaphora, 297-328. Boel DE GEER, and Tiia TULVISTE, Behaviour regulation in the family context in Estonia and Sweden, 329-346. Elizabeth KEATING, Everyday interactions and the domestication of social inequality, 347-359.
12:4 (December 2002) Virginie LAVAL and Josie BERNICOT, "Tu es dans la lune": Understanding idioms in French-speaking children and adults, 399-413. H. Paul MANNING, Orderly affect: The syntactic coding of pragmatics in Welsh expressive constructions, 415-446. Tarja NIKULA, Teacher talk reflecting pragmatic awareness: A look at EFL and content-based classroom settings, 447-467. Carmen VALERO-GARCÉS, Interactional and conversational constrictions in the relationships between suppliers of services and immigrant users, 469-495.
13:1 (March 2003) SPECIAL ISSUE: Ethnography, discourse, and hegemony edited by Jan Blommaert, James Collins, Monica Heller, Ben Rampton, Stef Slembrouck and Jef Verschueren
Jan BLOMMAERT, James COLLINS, Monica HELLER, Ben RAMPTON, Stef SLEMBROUCK, and Jef VERSCHUEREN, Introduction, 1-10. Monica HELLER, Actors and discourses in the construction of hegemony, 11-31. Jan BLOMMAERT, Orthopraxy, writing and identity: Shaping lives through borrowed genres in Congo, 33-48. Ben RAMPTON, Hegemony, social class and stylisation, 49-83. James COLLINS, "The Reading Wars In Situ", 85-100. Stef SLEMBROUCK, Class and parenting in accounts of child protection: A discursive ethnography under construction, 101-134. Jef VERSCHUEREN, A touch of class: The erasion of group-based social inequality as a hegemonic process in political discourse, 135-143. Celso ALVAREZ-CÁCCAMO and Gabriela PREGO-VÁZQUEZ, Political cross-discourse: Conversationalization, imaginary networks, and social fields in Galiza, 145-162. Patrick DE VOS, Discourse theory and the study of ideological (trans-)formations: Analysing social democratic revisionism, 163-180.
13:2 (June 2003) Leiv Egil Brreivik, On relative clauses and locative expressions in English existential sentences, 211-230. Marie Girard and Claude Sionis, Formulaic speech in the L2 class: An attempt at identification and classification, 231-251. Bonnie McElhinny, Fearful, forceful agents of the law: Ideologies about language and gender in police officers' narratives about the use of physical force, 253-284. Jan Svennevig, Echo answers in native/non-native interaction, 285-309.
13:3/4 (September/December 2003) Niclas Burenhult, Attention, accessibility, and the addressee: The case of the Jahai demonstrative ton, 363-379. Winnie Cheng and Martin Warren, Indirectness, inexplicitness and vagueness made clearer, 381-400. Camelia Suleiman and Daniel C. O'Connell, Perspective in the discourse of war: The case of Colin Powel, 401-422. Toshiko Yamaguchi, Reanalysis of contrastive -wa in Japanese: Perspectives from newspaper articles, December 2003, 423-450. Janina Fenigsen, Introduction, 453-456. Janina Fenigsen, Language ideologies in Barbados: Processes and paradigms, 457-481. Brigittine M. French, The politics of Mayan linguistics in Guatemala: Native speakers, expert analysts, and the nation, 483-498. Adi Hastings, Simplifying SanskritAlexandra Jaffe, Misrecognition unmasked? "Polysemic" language, expert statuses and orthographic practices in Corsican schools, 499-513. Alexandra Jaffe, Misrecognition unmasked? 'Polynomic' language, expert statuses and orthographic practices in Corsican schools, 515-537. Anita Puckett, The "value" of dialect as object: The case of Appalachian English, 539-549. Daniel F. Suslak, The story of ö: Orthography and cultural politics in the Mixe highlands, 551-563.
14:1 (March 2004) Bert CORNILLIE, The shift from lexical to subjective readings of Spanish prometer ‘promise' and amenazar ‘threaten'. A corpus-based account, 1-30. Marie GIRARD and Claude SIONIS, The functions of formulaic speech in the L2 class, 31-53. Frederick KANG'ETHE-IRAKI, Cognitive efficiency: The sheng phenomenon in Kenya, 55-68. Isabella PAOLETTI and Giolo FELE, Order and disorder in the classroom, 69-85.
14:2-3 (June-September 2004)
SPECIAL ISSUE: Relationality: Discursive constructions of Asian Pacific American identities
edited by Adrienne Lo and Angela Reyes Adrienne LO and Angela REYES, Language, identity and relationality in Asian Pacific America: An introduction, 115-125. Mary BUCHOLTZ, Styles and stereotypes: The linguistic negotiation of identity among Laotian American youth, 127-147. Steven TALMY, Forever fob: The cultural production of ESL in a high school, 149-172. Angela REYES, Asian American stereotypes as circulating resource, 173-192. Jane H. HILL, On where stereotypes come from so that kids can recruit them, 193-197. Agnes Weiyun HE, Identity construction in Chinese heritage language classes, 199-216. M. Agnes KANG, Constructing ethnic identity through discourse: Self-categorization among Korean American camp counselors, 217-233. Adrienne LO, Evidentiality and morality in a Korean heritage language school, 235-256. Bonnie URCIUOLI, The discursive emergence of the cultural actor: Commentary on He, Kang, and Lo, 257-261. Elaine W. CHUN, Ideologies of legitimate mockery: Margaret Cho’s revoicings of mock Asian, 263-289. Roderick N. LABRADOR, "We can laugh at ourselves": Hawai‘i ethnic humor, local identity and the myth of multiculturalism, 291-316. Shalini SHANKAR, Reel to real: Desi teens’ linguistic engagements with Bollywood, 317-335. Susan GAL, Commentary: Perspective and the politics of representation, 337-339. Adrienne LO and Angela REYES, Selected works on Asian Pacific American language practices, 341-346.
14:4 (December 2004) Barbara BOKUS, Inter-mind phenomena in child narrative discourse, 391-408. Kuniyoshi KATAOKA, Co-construction of a mental map in spatial discourse: A case study of Japanese rock climbers' of deictic verbs of motion, 409-438. Janet HOLMES & Meredith MARRA, Leadership and managing conflict in meetings, 439-462. Daniel O'CONNELL & Sabine KOWAL, Hillary Clinton's laughter in media interviews, 463-478. Johanna RENDLE-SHORT, Showing structure: Using um in the academic seminar, 479-498. Philip W. RUDD, Weapons of mass destruction: The unshared referents of Bush's rhetoric, 499-525. 15:1 (March 2005) Boel DE GEER, Tiia TULVISTE & Luule MIZERA, Regulation of behavior and attention in Estonian, Finnish and Swedish peer interaction, 1-24. Marie-Noëlle GUILLOT, Revisiting the methodological debate on interruptions: From measurement to classification in the annotation of data for cross-cultural research, 25-47. Gabrina POUNDS, Writer’s argumentative attitude: A contrastive analysis of ‘Letters to the Editor’ in English and Italian, 49-88. David POVEDA, Metalinguistic activity, humor and social competence in classroom discourse, 89-107. Hao SUN, Collaborative strategies in Chinese telephone conversation closings: Balancing procedural needs and interpersonal meaning making, 109-128. 15:2-3 (June-September 2005) Nana Aba APPIAH AMFO, Recurrence marking in Akan, 151-168. I WAYAN ARKA, Speech levels, social predicates and pragmatic structure in Balinese: A lexical approach, 169-203. Cynthia DICKEL DUNN, Genre conventions, speaker identities, and creativity: An analysis of Japanese wedding speeches, 205-228. Kevin McKENZIE, Conspiracy theory and the critical enterprise, 229-250. Ayman R. NAZZAL, The pragmatic functions of the recitation of Qur’anic verses by muslims in their oral genre: The case of Insha’Allah, ‘God’s Willing’, 251-273. D. O’CONNOR & S. KOWAL, Laughter in Bill Clinton’s My life (2004) interviews, 275-299.
15:4 (December 2005) Boel DE GEER and Tiia TULVISTE, “You are not allowed to pull someone’s tail!” - A cross-cultural comparison of socio-moral comments in Estonian and Swedish peer interaction, 349-368. Elly IFANTIDOU, Pragmatics, cognition and asymmetrically acquired evidentials, 369-394. Cynthia LEE, A cross-linguistic study on the linguistic expressions of Cantonese and English requests, 395-422. Yuka MATSUGU, Japanese epistemic sentence-final particle kana: Its function as a ‘mitigation marker’ in discourse data, 423-436. Valentina PAGLIAI and Brooke S. BOCAST, Singing gender: Contested discourses of womanhood in Tuscan-Italian verbal art, 437-457.
16:1 (March 2006) Gordon C. CHANG and Hugh B. MEHAN, Discourse in a religious mode: The Bush administration’s discourse in the War on Terrorism and its challenges, 1-23 Akin ODEBUNMI, Locutions in medical discourse in Southwestern Nigeria, 25-41. Şükriye RUHI, Politeness in compliment responses: A perspective from naturally occurring exchanges in Turkish, 43-101. Pieter A.M. SEUREN, The natural logic of language and cognition, 103-138.
16:2/3 (June/September 2006) Asa BRUMARK, Regulatory talk and politeness at the family dinner, 171-211. Gerald DELAHUNTY, A relevance theoretic analysis of not that sentences, 213-245. David LÜTHI, How implicatures make Grice an unordinary language philosopher, 247-274. Nawaf OBIEDAT, The pragma-ideological implications of using reported speech: The case of reporting on the Al-Aqsa Intifada, 275-304. Daniel C. O'CONNELL and Sabine KOWAL, Laughter in the film The Third Man, 305-327. Maite TABOADA, Spontaneous and non-spontaneous turn-taking, 329-360. Lidia TANAKA, Turn-taking in Japanese television interviews: A study on interviewers' strategies, 361-398.
16:4 (December 2006) Janice Helena CHAVES MARINHO, Evaluating discursive relations in Brazilians' advice-giving, 317-428. Chie FUKUDA, Resistance against being formulated as cultural Other: The case of a Chinese student in Japan, 429-456. Claudia MONACELLI, Implications of translational shifts in interpreter-mediated texts, 457-473. Keiko NARUOKA, The interactional functions of the Japanese demonstratives in conversation, 475-512. Naoko TAGUCHI, Analysis of appropriateness in a speech act of request in L2 English, 513-533. Anthony K. WEBSTER, From Hóyéé to Hajinei: On some implications of feelingful iconicity and orthography in Navajo poetry, 535-549.
17:1 (March 2007)
SPECIAL ISSUE: A closer look at cultural difference: 'Interculturality' in talk-in-interaction edited by Christina Higgins
Christina HIGGINS, Introduction: A closer look at cultural difference: 'Interculturality' in talk-in-interaction, 1-7. Cecelia CUTLER, The co-construction of Whiteness in an MC battle, 9-22. Hye-Kyung RYOO, Interculturality serving multiple interactional goals in African American and Korean serviceencounters, 23-47. Christina HIGGINS, Constructing membership in the in-group: Affiliation and resistance among urban Tanzanians, 49-70. Erica ZIMMERMAN, Constructing Korean and Japanese interculturality in talk: Ethnic membership categorization among users of Japanese, 71-94. Elizabeth AXELSON, Vocatives: A double-edged strategy in intercultural discourse among graduate students, 95-122. Junko MORI, Reconstructing the participants' treatments of 'interculturality': Variations in data and methodologies, 123-141.
17:2 (June 2007) David BELL, Sentence-initial and and but in academic writing, 183-201. Bethan L. DAVIES, Principles we talk by: Testing dialogue principles in task-oriented dialogues, 203-230. Janina FENIGSEN, From Apartheid to incorporation: The emergence and transformations of modern language community in Barbados, West Indies, 231-261. Helga KOTTHOFF, Oral genres of humor: On the dialectic of genre knowledge and creative authoring, 263-296. Robin SHOAPS, "Moral irony:" Modal particles, moral persons and indirect stance-taking in Sakapultek discourse, 297-335.
17:3 (September 2007) Milan FERENCIK, Exercising politeness: Membership categorisation in a radio phone-in programme, 351-370. Toshiaki FURUKAWA, "No flips in the pool": Discursive practice in Hawai'i Creole, 371-385. Kerstin NORÉN and Per LINELL, Meaning potentials and the interaction between lexis and contexts: An empirical substantiation, 387-416. Daniel C. O'CONNELL, Sabine KOWAL, and Scott P. KING, Interjections in literary readings and artistic performance, 417-438. Minerva OROPEZA-ESCOBAR, Discourse, authority and mediation in an ethnographic encounter in Eastern Mexico, 439-460. Marina SBISÀ, How to read Austin, 461-473.
17:4 (December 2007)
SPECIAL ISSUE: Turn continuation in cross-linguistic perspective edited byElizabeth Couper-Kuhlen and Tsuyoshi Ono
Tsuyoshi ONO and Elizabeth COUPER-KUHLEN, Increments in cross-linguistic perspective: Introductory remarks, 505-512. Elizabeth COUPER-KUHLEN and Tsuyoshi ONO, 'Incrementing' in conversation. A comparison of practices in English, German and Japanese, 513-552. Eeva-Leena SEPPÄNEN and Ritva LAURY, Complement clauses as turn continuations: The Finnish et(tä)-clause, 553-572. Kyu-hyun KIM, Sequential organization of post-predicate elements in Korean conversation: Pursuing uptake and modulating action, 573-603. Kang-kwong LUKE and Wei ZHANG, Retrospective turn continuations in Madarin Chinese conversation, 605-635. Margaret FIELD, Increments in Navajo conversation, 637-646. Peter AUER, Why are increments such elusive objects? An afterthought, 647-658.
18:1 (March 2008)
SPECIAL ISSUE:
The discourse of news management
edited by Geert Jacobs and Henk Pander Maat
Geert JACOBS, Henk PANDER MAAT, and Tom VAN HOUT, Introduction: The discourse of news management, 1-18. Paola CATENACCIO, Press releases as a hybrid genre: Addressing the informative/promotional conundrum, 19-31. Maria LINDHOLM, A community text pattern in the European Commission press release? A generic and genetic view, 33-58. Tom VAN HOUT and Geert JACOBS, News production theory and practice: Fieldwork notes on power, interaction and agency, 59-85. Henk PANDER MAAT, Editing and genre conflict: How newspaper journalists clarify and neutralize press release copy, 87-113. Frank JANSEN, Conciseness, an outsider's perspective and smooth intonation contour: A comparison of appositions in press releases and news stories based upon them, 115-142.
18:2 (June 2008) Isolda E. CARRANZA, Metapragmatics in a courtroom genre, 169-188. Maria CHRISTODOULIDOU, Siga in interaction,189-213. Ellen B. BASSO, Epistemic deixis in Kalapalo, 215-252. Jennifer N. GARLAND, The importance of being Irish: National identity, cultural authenticity, and linguistic authority in an Irish language class in the United States, 253-276. Andrew D. WONG, The trouble with Tongzhi: The politics of labeling among gay and lesbian Hongkongers, 277-301. Xudong DENG, The use of listener responses in Mandarin Chinese and Australian English, 303-328.
18:3 (September 2008) Adeyemi DARAMOLA, A child of necessity: An analysis of political discourse in Nigeria, 355-380. Elwys DE STEFANI and Anne-Sylvie HORLACHER, Topical and sequential backlinking in a French radio phone-in program: Turn shapes and sequential placements, 381-406. Jaime J. GELABERT-DESNOYER, Not so impersonal: Intentionality in the use of pronoun uno in contemporary Spanish political discourse, 407-424. Michael HAUGH, Utterance-final conjunctive particles and implicature in Japanese conversation, 425-451. Marianne MASON, Psychics and the 'other side': A discourse analysis of televised psychic readings, 453-468. Nele NIVELLE, Counterfactual conditionals in argumentative legal language in Dutch, 469-490. Dorien VAN DE MIEROOP, Co-constructing identities in speeches: How the construction of an 'other' identity is defining for the 'self' identity and vice versa, 491-509. Anthony K. WEBSTER, "Plaza 'góó and before he can respond...": Language ideology, bilingual Navajo and Navajo poetry, 511-541.
18:4 (December 2008) SPECIAL ISSUE: (Im)politeness in Spanish-speaking socio-cultural contexts Edited by Diana Bravo
Diana BRAVO, (Im)politeness in Spanish-speaking socio-cultural contexts: Introduction, 563-576. Diana BRAVO, The implications of studying politeness in Spanish-speaking contexts: A discussion (Las implicaciones del estudio de la cortesía en contextos del español. Una discusión), 577-603. Adriana BOLÍVAR, Perceptions of (im)politeness in Venezuelan Spanish: The role of evaluation in interaction (Percepciones de la (des)cortesía en el español de Venezuela: El papel de la evaluación en la interacción), 605-633. Anna-Brita STENSTRÖM and Annette Myre JÖRGENSEN, A matter of politeness? A contrastive study of phatic talk in teenage conversation (¿Una cuestión de cortesía? Estudio contrastivo del lenguaje fático en la conversación juvenil), 635-657. Domnita DUMITRESCU, Interrogative allo-repetitions in Mexican Spanish: Discourse functions and (im)politeness strategies (Alo-repeticiones interrogativas en el español mexicano: Funciones discursivas y estrategias de (des)cortesía), 659-680. Nieves HERNÁNDEZ-FLORES, Politeness and other types of facework: Communicative and social meaning in a television panel discussion (Cortesía y otros tipos de actividades de imagen: Significado comunicativo y social en un debate televisivo), 681-706. Josefa CONTRERAS FERNÁNDEZ, Conversational silence and face in two sociocultural contexts (Silencio conversacioonal e imagen social en dos contextos socioculturales), 707-728. Silvia KAUL DE MARLANGEON, Impoliteness in institutional and non-institutional contexts (La descortesía en contextos institucionales y no institucionales), 729-749. Marta ALBELDA MARCO, Influence of situational factors in the codification and interpretation of impoliteness (Influencia de los factores situacionales en la codificación e interpretación de la descortesía), 751-773. Maria BERNAL, Do insults always insult? Genuine politeness versus non-genuine politeness in colloquial Spanish (¿Insultan los insultos? Descortesía auténtica vs. descortesía no auténtica en el español coloquial), 775-802.
19:1 (March 2009)
SPECIAL ISSUE:
Youth language at the intersection: From migration to globalization
Edited by Mary Bucholtz and Elena Skapoulli
Mary BUCHOLTZ and Elena SKAPOULLI,
Introduction: Youth language at the intersection: From migration to globalization, 1-16.
Elaine CHUN,
Speaking like Asian immigrants: Intersections of accommodation and mocking at a U.S. high school, 17-38.
Jung-Eun Janie LEE,
‘She’s Hungarious so she’s Mexican but she’s most likely Indian’: Negotiating ethnic labels in a California junior high school, 39-63.
Chantal TETREAULT, Reflecting respect: Transcultural communicative practices of Muslim French youth, 65-83.
Elena SKAPOULLI,
Transforming the label of ‘whore’: Teenage girls’ negotiation of local and global
gender ideologies in Cyprus, 85-101.
H. Samy ALIM,
Translocal style communities: Hip hop youth as cultural theorists of style, language, and globalization, 103-127.
Jennifer ROTH-GORDON and T.E. WORONOV,
Commentary: Youthful concerns: Movement, belonging, and modernity , 129-143.
19:2 (June 2009) Christine BOCÉRÉAN and Michel MUSIOL, Mutual understanding mechanism in verbal exchanges between carers and multiply-disabled young,people: An interaction structure analysis, 161-177. Maicol FORMENTELLI, Address strategies in a British academic setting, 179-196. Carmen GARCÍA, ¿Qué::? cómo que te vas a casar? Congratulations and rapport management: A case study of Peruvian Spanish speakers, 197-222. Song Mei LEE-WONG, Discourse as communicative action: Validation of China's new socio-cultural paradigm Qiye Wenhua/'enterprise culture', 223-239. Ana Cristina MACÁRIO LOPES, Justification: A coherence relation, 241-252. Cindi L. STURTZSREETHARAN, Ore and omae: Japanese men's uses of first- and second-person pronouns, 253-278. Tiia TULVISTE and Boel DE GEER, Autonomy orientation in Estonian and Swedish family interactions, 279-291.
19:3 (September 2009)
SPECIAL ISSUE: Language, discourse and identities: Snapshot from Greek contexts
edited by Alexandra Georgakopoulou and Vally Lytra
Alexandra GEORGAKOPOULOU and Vally LYTRA, Introduction: Language, discourse and identities in Greek contexts, 311-316.
Dionysis GOUTSOS and Georgia FRAGAKI, Lexical choices of gender identity in Greek genres: The view from corpora, 317-340.
Argiris ARCHAKIS and Angeliki TZANNE, Constructing social identities through story-telling: Tracing Greekness in Greek narratives, 341-360.
Stavroula TSIPLAKOU, Doing (bi)lingualism: Language alternation as performative construction of online identities, 361-391.
Tereza SPILIOTI, Graphemic representation of text-messaging: Alphabet-choice and code-switches in Greek SMS, 393-412.
Jannis ANDROUTSOPOULOS, Global issues and local findings from Greek contexts: A postscript, 413-417.
Korina GIAXOGLOU, Entextualizing vernacular forms in a Maniat village: Features of orthopraxy in local folklore practice, 419-434.
Lukas D. TSITSIPIS, The discursive construction of multiple identities of the Albanian (Arvanitika) speakers of Greece, 435-448.
Vally LYTRA, Constructing academic hierarchies: Teasing and identity work among peers at school, 449-466.
Alexandra GEORGAKOPOULOU and Katerina FINNIS, Code-switching 'in site' for fantasizing identities: A case study of conventional uses of London Greek Cypriot, 467-488.
Jan BLOMMAERT, Delicacies: Some reflections - Postscript, 489-491.
19:4 (December 2009)
Saeko FUKUSHIMA, Evaluation of politeness: Do the Japanese evaluate attentiveness more positively
than the British?, 501-518.
Cher
Leng LEE,
Compliments and responses during Chinese new year celebrations in
Singapore, 519-541.
Kashama MULAMBA, Social beliefs for the realization of the speech acts of apology and complaint as
defined in Ciluba, French, and English, 543-564.
Thomas SCHMIDT and Kai WÖRNER, EXMARaLDA – Creating, analyzing and sharing spoken language corpora for
pragmatics research, 565-582.
Satoko SUZUKI, Vernacular style writing: Strategy blurring of the boundary between spoken and written discourse in Japanese, 583-608.
Reinhild VANDEKERCKHOVE, Annick DE HOUWER, and Aline REMAEL,
Between language policy and linguistic reality: Intralingual subtitling on Flemish
television, 609-628.
20:1 (March 2010) Mohammed Nahar AL-ALI, Generic patterns and socio-cultural resources in acknowledgements accompanying Arabic Ph.D. dissertations, 1-26. Nana Aba APPIAH AMFO, Noun phrase conjunction in Akan: The grammaticalization path, 27-41. Nydia FLORES-FERRÁN, Letting go of the past in Spanish therapeutic discourse: An examination of verbs and discursive variables, 43-70. Yoko HASEGAWA, The sentence-final particles ne and yo in soliloquial Japanese, 71-89. Paul K. KROSKRITY, Getting negatives in Arizona Tewa: On the relevance of ethnopragmatics and language ideologies to understanding a case ofgrammaticalization, 91-107.
Misumi SADLER, Subjective and intersubjective uses of Japanese verbs of cognition in conversation, 109-128.
|