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"The 2nd edition of
The Handbook of Discourse Analysis boasts chapters by major figures (e.g. Gumperz, Holmes, Johnstone, Labov, Lakoff, Schegloff, Ochs, Shuy, Tannen, van Dijk, Wodak) and its reconfiguration of chapters captures important scholarly trends in discourse analytic research and reflects a fairly substantive reconceptualization of the field."
Susan Ehrlich, Journal of Sociolinguistics, 2016 "As Discourse Analysis expands and diversifies, we need scholarship that maintains the coherence of the field, centered on socially aware linguistic theorizing. We also need scholarship which is able to shape new issues, emphases, and applications. The second edition of this
Handbook is a landmark achievement in both these regards. Two volumes of updated and original chapters by leading contributors provide an outstanding, up-to-date resource, including several real gems by founding figures in Discourse Analysis that should be consulted by researchers and students alike."
Nikolas Coupland, University of Copenhagen and Cardiff University "There are several handbooks of Discourse Analysis available today - this two-volume collection is the most comprehensive and intellectually stimulating of them all. Updated throughout to reflect the very latest research across a wide range of theoretical and analytic approaches, The Handbook of Discourse Analysis is accessible to undergraduates and yet represents a state-of-the-art resource for graduate students and academics alike. Highly recommended."
John E. Richardson, Loughborough University The second edition of the highly successful
Handbook of Discourse Analysis has been thoroughly updated to reflect the very latest research to have developed since the publication of the first edition in 2001. Updates include new research conducted in all areas covered by the original 41 chapters - for example, the exploration of recent theoretical paradigms - as well as expanded and enriched existing frameworks. Moreover, new types of discourse have appeared with the invention and adoption of new technologies. In addition to updating chapters that appeared in the original edition, the second edition includes 20 entirely new chapters that highlight emerging trends and areas of research. The result is a cutting-edge resource, written and edited by leading researchers in their respective fields, which provides an elegant and state-of-the-art overview of the field. The two-volume handbook delivers a vital resource for scholars and students in discourse studies and related fields.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Notes on Contributors xi
Preface to the Second Edition xix
Introduction to the First Edition 1
I Linguistic Analysis of Discourse 9 1 Discourse and Grammar 11
Marianne Mithun 2 Intertextuality in Discourse 42
Adam Hodges 3 Cohesion and Texture 61
J. R. Martin 4 Intonation and Discourse 82
Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen 5 Voice Registers 105
Mark A. Sicoli 6 Computer-Mediated Discourse 2.0 127
Susan C. Herring and Jannis Androutsopoulos 7 Discourse Analysis and Narrative 152
Anna De Fina and Barbara Johnstone 8 Humor and Laughter 168
Salvatore Attardo 9 Discourse Markers: Language, Meaning, and Context 189
Yael Maschler and Deborah Schiffrin 10 Historical Discourse Analysis 222
Laurel J. Brinton 11 Discourse, Space, and Place 244
Elizabeth Keating 12 Gesture in Discourse 262
David Mcneill, Elena T. Levy, and Susan D. Duncan II Approaches and Methodologies 291 13 Nine Ways of Looking at Apologies: The Necessity for Interdisciplinary Theory and Method in Discourse Analysis 293
Robin Tolmach Lakoff 14 Interactional Sociolinguistics: A Personal Perspective 309
John J. Gumperz 15 Framing and Positioning 324
Cynthia Gordon 16 Conversational Interaction: The Embodiment of Human Sociality 346
Emanuel A. Schegloff 17 Transcribing Embodied Action 367
Paul Luff and Christian Heath 18 Constraining and Guiding the Flow of Discourse 391
Wallace Chafe 19 Imagination in Narratives 406
Herbert H. Clark and Mija M. Van Der Wege 20 Oral Discourse as a Semiotic Ecology: TheCo-construction and Mutual Influence of Speaking, Listening, and Looking 422
Frederick Erickson 21 Multimodality 447
Theo Van Leeuwen 22 Critical Discourse Analysis 466
Teun A. Van Dijk 23 Computer-Assisted Methods of Analyzing Textual and Intertextual Competence 486
Michael Stubbs 24 Register Variation: A Corpus Approach 505
Shelley Staples, Jesse Egbert, Douglas Biber, and Susan Conrad III The Individual, Society, and Culture 527 25 Voices of the Speech Community: Six People I Have Learned From 529
William Labov 26 Language Ideologies 557
Susan U. Philips 27 Discourse and Racism 576
Ruth Wodak and Martin Reisigl 28 Code-Switching, Identity, and Globalization 597
Kira Hall and Chad Nilep 29 Cross-cultural and Intercultural Communication and Discourse Analysis 620
Scott F. Kiesling 30 Discourse and Gender 639
Shari Kendall and Deborah Tannen 31 Queer Linguistics as Critical Discourse Analysis 661
William L. Leap 32 Child Discourse 681
Amy Kyratzis and Jenny Cook-Gumperz 33 Discourse and Aging 705
Heidi E. Hamilton and Toshiko Hamaguchi 34 Discursive Underpinnings of Family Coordination 728
Elinor Ochs and Tamar Kremer-Sadlik IV Discourse in Real-World Contexts 753 35 Institutional Discourse 755
Andrea Mayr 36 Political Discourse 775
John Wilson 37 Discourse and Media 795
Colleen Cotter 38 Discourse Analysis in the Legal Context 822
Roger W. Shuy 39 Discourse and Health Communication 841
Rodney H. Jones 40 Discourse in Educational Settings 858
Carolyn Temple Adger and Laura J. Wright 41 Discourse in the Workplace 880
Janet Holmes 42 Discourse and Religion 902
Michael Lempert Author Index 921
Subject Index 939
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Deborah Tannen is University Professor and Professor of Linguistics at Georgetown University. She has published 25 books, including
You're the Only One I Can Tell: Inside the Language of Women's Friendships (2017),
Talking Voices (2
nd edition 2007),
Conversational Style (New Edition 2005), and
You Just Don't Understand (1990). She has been McGraw Distinguished Lecturer at Princeton University and has twice been a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford.
Heidi E. Hamilton is Professor in the Department of Linguistics at Georgetown University. Her publications include
Language, Dementia, and Meaning Making: Navigating Everyday Challenges of Epistemic Understanding and Face
(in preparation), the
Routledge Handbook of Language and Health Communication (co-edited with Sylvia Chou, 2014),
Linguistics, Language, and the Professions (co-edited with James E. Alatis and Ai-hui Tan, 2002), and
Conversations with an Alzheimer's Patient: An Interactional Sociolinguistic Study (1994, 2005). She has served as Fulbright Distinguished Chair in Linguistics in Innsbruck, Austria and as DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service) Visiting Professor in Berlin, Germany, and is recipient of the Humboldt Research Award.
Deborah Schiffrin was Professor Emerita of Linguistics at Georgetown University. Her publications included
In other words: Variation in reference and narrative (2006),
Approaches to Discourse (1994), and
Discourse Markers (1987). She was also the co-editor of
Telling Stories (with Anna De Fina and Anastasia Nylund, 2010) and
Discourse and Identity (with Anna De Fina and Michael Bamberg, 2006). Deborah sadly passed away in July 2017.
Zusammenfassung
The second edition of the highly successful Handbook of Discourse Analysis has been expanded and thoroughly updated to reflect the very latest research to have developed since the original publication, including new theoretical paradigms and discourse-analytic models, in an authoritative two-volume set.