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Axiologyin current linguistic research
In: Asian journal of research in social sciences and humanities: AJRSH, Band 12, Heft 5, S. 91-95
ISSN: 2249-7315
New perspectives in interactional linguistic research
In: Studies in language and social interaction Volume 36
"This collection of original papers illustrates recent trends and new perspectives for future research in Interactional Linguistics (IL). Since the research program was started around the turn of the century, it has prospered internationally. Recently, however, new developments have opened up new perspectives for interactional linguistic research. IL continues to study the details of talk in social interaction, with a focus on linguistic resources and structures of verbal and vocal interaction in bodily-visible interactional settings. Increasingly, though, it embraces methods supported by new technology, where appropriate, and broadens its data and research questions to applications in teaching, therapy, etc. The volume comprises three parts with 14 original contributions following the editors' introduction: 1. Studying linguistic resources in social interaction; 2. Studying linguistic resources in embodied social interaction; and 3. Studying social interaction in institutional contexts and involving speakers with specific proficiencies"--
Continuity and change in linguistic research
In: Dialectical anthropology: an independent international journal in the critical tradition committed to the transformation of our society and the humane union of theory and practice, Band 9, Heft 1-4
ISSN: 1573-0786
New perspectives in interactional linguistic research
In: Studies in language and social interaction volume 36
Socio-Linguistic Research in Sociology of Sport
In: International review of sport sociology: irss ; a quarterly edited on behalf of the International Sociology of Sport Association (ISSA), Band 13, Heft 2, S. 95-107
This article deals with the necessity to include socio-inguistic research in the entire complex of problems related to sport. Socio-linguistic research makes it possible to watch the developmental process of sport, approaching it from a variety of points of view. The social structure exerts a direct influence on the language structure, the lan guage in turn exerts its influence on the general level of development of the team and individual. The article presents the ways in which the sports language is taking shape. Subject of the discussion, using as an example an etymological analysis of borrowing terminology from foreign languages, is the process of the taking shape of sports ter minology.
Nuance and normativity in trans linguistic research
In: Journal of language and sexuality, Band 10, Heft 1, S. 71-82
ISSN: 2211-3789
AbstractWhilenormativityhas been central to queer linguistic research, the emergent field of trans linguistics provides opportunities for greater nuance and elaboration on the concept. Drawing from interviews with non-binary people documenting their narratives of doctor-patient visits, I present a series of recounted interactional moments where what might be considered 'normative' is in fact a survival strategy, highlighting how we might view certain invocations of the transnormative (Johnson 2016) in more complicated ways. Notions ofnormativityandauthenticity, which are too often weaponized against trans people as a means to measure their 'success' in approximating cisheteronormative ideals, are not easily transported from queer linguistics to trans linguistics. As concepts imbricated with a history of violence for trans people, they must be treated with care and responsibility, as part of an active devotion to dismantling transphobia.
The Notion of Culture in Linguistic Research
In: Forum qualitative Sozialforschung: FQS = Forum: qualitative social research, Band 10, Heft 1
ISSN: 1438-5627
Muchos trabajos en comunicación intercultural en el campo de la lingüística comparten el supuesto de que la influencia de la cultura sobre la interacción social se manifestará en los intercambios comunicativos, e igualmente que una mirada académica a esos intercambios será base suficiente para una adecuada descripción de cómo se supone que sea la comunicación intercultural. La teoría lingüística misma, careciendo de lugares para integrar a la cultura como un factor en sus conceptos, urge a los académicos a pedir prestadas operacionalizaciones de la cultura desde disciplinas vecinas, como diferentes corrientes de la psicología, sociología o antropología. Como una consecuencia, los enfoques que resultan de esta orientación transdisciplinar, comparten supuestos muy divergentes sobre cómo, en qué momento en un proceso comunicativo, y con qué efectos, la cultura afecta la interacción social. Mientras que muchas investigaciones desde tendencias similares distinguen entre los enfoques primordiales y construccionistas, una mirada más cercana a diferentes corrientes de investigación lingüística empírica puede revelar distinciones aún más exactas y detalladas acerca de cómo pensarse y enmarcar a la cultura. Este artículo presentará y analizará una selección de enfoques del campo mencionado, por ejemplo desde la pragmática comparada e intercultural, sociolingüística interaccional, etnografía de la comunicación, etnometodología y análisis del discurso. En cada caso se revelarán las nociones subyacentes de cultura y se contrastarán. Además, este análisis de ejemplos mostrará que, a lo largo del tiempo, la mayoría de las escuelas empíricas mencionadas siguen y adoptan nociones cambiantes de cultura de la teoría social.
An Overall Review of Linguistic Research on Genre
In: Review of European studies: RES, Band 2, Heft 2
ISSN: 1918-7181
Linguistic diversity in Canadian society
In: Sociolinguistics series 1
In: Current inquiry series Nr. 11
INFORMATION WARFARE: METHODOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES OF LINGUISTIC RESEARCH
In: Политическая лингвистика, Heft 4, S. 53-59
On the representativeness of political corpora in linguistic research
There is a long tradition of linguistic research on political discourse from various theoretical perspectives, including critical discourse analysis (see among many others Fairclough 1995, Fairclough & Fairclough 2012, Wodak 1989), lexicometric approaches (see for instance Arnold 2005, Mayaffre 2005, 2016, Mayaffre & Poudat 2013, Authors 2015a) or cognitive linguistic approaches to metaphor (see among many other Charteris Black 2011, Musolff 2004, 2013, 2016 L'Hôte 2012). In these studies, political corpora collected from discourses by political elites (presidential debates, presidential addresses, public speeches,…) often appear to be overrepresented, leaving aside other forms of political discourses such as media discourse on political issues (see however Musolff 2004, 2013) or citizen discourse. As Bougher (2012 :149) posits for metaphor analysis : "while research on metaphors in political discourse has flourished in recent years, the focus on elite communication has left metaphor's wider capacity as a reasoning tool for citizens underexplored". This results in a certain lack of representativeness of the political domain in linguistic studies. Indeed, political discourse is not restricted to the political elites alone. Advocating a more global to political corpora, including corpora from different subdomains of the political spectrum, our talk is structured in two main parts. Firstly, we will propose a quantitative bibliographic analysis aiming at assessing what type of political corpora are frequently used in linguistic research. Secondly, on the basis of previous and current analyses of different kinds of political corpora (including citizen, media and elite discourse) we have been collecting in the framework of the ADAPOF-project (see for example Authors 2015b), we will illustrate how taking this variety of political genres into account, allows us to unravel phenomena such as conceptual alignment or metaphor circulation, related to specific political issues (in this case Belgian federalism).
BASE
On the representativeness of political corpora in linguistic research
There is a long tradition of linguistic research on political discourse from various theoretical perspectives, including critical discourse analysis (see among many others Fairclough 1995, Fairclough & Fairclough 2012, Wodak 1989), lexicometric approaches (see for instance Arnold 2005, Mayaffre 2005, 2016, Mayaffre & Poudat 2013, Authors 2015a) or cognitive linguistic approaches to metaphor (see among many other Charteris Black 2011, Musolff 2004, 2013, 2016 L'Hôte 2012). In these studies, political corpora collected from discourses by political elites (presidential debates, presidential addresses, public speeches,…) often appear to be overrepresented, leaving aside other forms of political discourses such as media discourse on political issues (see however Musolff 2004, 2013) or citizen discourse. As Bougher (2012 :149) posits for metaphor analysis : "while research on metaphors in political discourse has flourished in recent years, the focus on elite communication has left metaphor's wider capacity as a reasoning tool for citizens underexplored". This results in a certain lack of representativeness of the political domain in linguistic studies. Indeed, political discourse is not restricted to the political elites alone. Advocating a more global to political corpora, including corpora from different subdomains of the political spectrum, our talk is structured in two main parts. Firstly, we will propose a quantitative bibliographic analysis aiming at assessing what type of political corpora are frequently used in linguistic research. Secondly, on the basis of previous and current analyses of different kinds of political corpora (including citizen, media and elite discourse) we have been collecting in the framework of the ADAPOF-project (see for example Authors 2015b), we will illustrate how taking this variety of political genres into account, allows us to unravel phenomena such as conceptual alignment or metaphor circulation, related to specific political issues (in this case Belgian federalism).
BASE
On the representativeness of political corpora in linguistic research
There is a long tradition of linguistic research on political discourse from various theoretical perspectives, including critical discourse analysis (see among many others Fairclough 1995, Fairclough & Fairclough 2012, Wodak 1989), lexicometric approaches (see for instance Arnold 2005, Mayaffre 2005, 2016, Mayaffre & Poudat 2013, Authors 2015a) or cognitive linguistic approaches to metaphor (see among many other Charteris Black 2011, Musolff 2004, 2013, 2016 L'Hôte 2012). In these studies, political corpora collected from discourses by political elites (presidential debates, presidential addresses, public speeches,…) often appear to be overrepresented, leaving aside other forms of political discourses such as media discourse on political issues (see however Musolff 2004, 2013) or citizen discourse. As Bougher (2012 :149) posits for metaphor analysis : "while research on metaphors in political discourse has flourished in recent years, the focus on elite communication has left metaphor's wider capacity as a reasoning tool for citizens underexplored". This results in a certain lack of representativeness of the political domain in linguistic studies. Indeed, political discourse is not restricted to the political elites alone. Advocating a more global to political corpora, including corpora from different subdomains of the political spectrum, our talk is structured in two main parts. Firstly, we will propose a quantitative bibliographic analysis aiming at assessing what type of political corpora are frequently used in linguistic research. Secondly, on the basis of previous and current analyses of different kinds of political corpora (including citizen, media and elite discourse) we have been collecting in the framework of the ADAPOF-project (see for example Authors 2015b), we will illustrate how taking this variety of political genres into account, allows us to unravel phenomena such as conceptual alignment or metaphor circulation, related to specific political issues (in this case Belgian federalism).
BASE
On the representativeness of political corpora in linguistic research
There is a long tradition of linguistic research on political discourse from various theoretical perspectives, including critical discourse analysis (see among many others Fairclough 1995, Fairclough & Fairclough 2012, Wodak 1989), lexicometric approaches (see for instance Arnold 2005, Mayaffre 2005, 2016, Mayaffre & Poudat 2013, Authors 2015a) or cognitive linguistic approaches to metaphor (see among many other Charteris Black 2011, Musolff 2004, 2013, 2016 L'Hôte 2012). In these studies, political corpora collected from discourses by political elites (presidential debates, presidential addresses, public speeches,…) often appear to be overrepresented, leaving aside other forms of political discourses such as media discourse on political issues (see however Musolff 2004, 2013) or citizen discourse. As Bougher (2012 :149) posits for metaphor analysis : "while research on metaphors in political discourse has flourished in recent years, the focus on elite communication has left metaphor's wider capacity as a reasoning tool for citizens underexplored". This results in a certain lack of representativeness of the political domain in linguistic studies. Indeed, political discourse is not restricted to the political elites alone. Advocating a more global to political corpora, including corpora from different subdomains of the political spectrum, our talk is structured in two main parts. Firstly, we will propose a quantitative bibliographic analysis aiming at assessing what type of political corpora are frequently used in linguistic research. Secondly, on the basis of previous and current analyses of different kinds of political corpora (including citizen, media and elite discourse) we have been collecting in the framework of the ADAPOF-project (see for example Authors 2015b), we will illustrate how taking this variety of political genres into account, allows us to unravel phenomena such as conceptual alignment or metaphor circulation, related to specific political issues (in this case Belgian federalism).
BASE