Fr. 96.00

Intercultural Miscommunication Past and Present

English · Hardback

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Description

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Miscommunication has always intrigued researchers in and outside linguistics. This book takes a different perspective from what has been proposed so far and postulates a case for intercultural miscommunication as a linguistically-based phenomenon in various intercultural milieus. The contributions address cases of intercultural miscommunication in potentially confrontational contexts, like professional communities of practice, intercultural differences in various English-speaking countries, political discourse, classroom discourse, or the discourse of the past. The frameworks employed include cultural scripts, critical discourse analysis, lexicographic analysis, glosses of untranslatable terms, and diachronic pragmatics. The book shows the omnipresence of miscommunication, ranging from everyday exchanges through classroom discourse, professional encounters, to literary contexts and political debates, past and present.

List of contents

Contents: Barbara Kryk-Kastovsky: Introduction - Zofia Golebiowski: Concessivity in scholarly prose: An intercultural study - Richard Trappl: Intercultural terminology and its political contexts: Towards a Sino-Western glossary - Matylda Weidner: On some 'dis-ings' leading to a possible 'mis-ing' - Anatolij Dorodnych/Anna Kuzio: The role of cultural scripts and contextualization cues in intercultural (mis)communication - Cliff Goddard: Cultural scripts and communication style differences in three Anglo Englishes (English English, American English and Australian English) - Anna Wierzbicka: When cultural scripts clash: Miscommunication in «multicultural» Australia - María Marta García Negroni/María Laura Spoturno: Bridging gaps across cultures: The case of glosses in Caramelo, a Chicana novel - Denise Gassner: Intercultural miscommunication and the use of 'vague language' - Michal Krzyzanowski: (Mis-)communicating Europe? On deficiencies and challenges in political and institutional communication in the European Union - Joanna Kopaczyk: Communication gaps in seventeenth century Britain: Explaining legal Scots to English practitioners - Barbara Kryk-Kastovsky: From monarch, through traitor, to martyr and saint: Power shift in the trial of King Charles I.

About the author










Barbara Kryk-Kastovsky is professor emerita at Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznä (Poland). She teaches at University of Vienna and Academy of Management in Warsaw, where she holds a professorial position. Her research interests include synchronic and diachronic pragmatics, intercultural communication, text linguistics, and discourse analysis.

Product details

Assisted by Barbara Kryk-Kastovsky (Editor)
Publisher Peter Lang
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.03.2016
 
EAN 9783631621998
ISBN 978-3-631-62199-8
No. of pages 262
Dimensions 148 mm x 19 mm x 210 mm
Weight 440 g
Series Warsaw Studies in English Language and Literature
Warsaw Studies in English Language and Literature
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative linguistics
Social sciences, law, business > Media, communication > Journalism

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