言谈互动中的意义 语用学引论 英文PDF电子书下载
- 电子书积分:10 积分如何计算积分?
- 作 者:(英)托马斯著
- 出 版 社:北京:外语教学与研究出版社
- 出版年份:2010
- ISBN:9787513500609
- 页数:224 页
1 What is pragmatics? 1
1.1 Introduction 1
1.2 Defining pragmatics 1
1.3 From abstract meaning to contextual meaning 2
1.3.1 Assigning sense in context 5
1.3.2 Assigning reference in context 8
1.3.3 Structural ambiguity 12
1.3.4 Interaction of sense,reference and structure 12
1.3.5 Ambiguity and intentionality 14
1.4 Utterance meaning:the first level of speaker meaning 16
1.4.1 Importance of utterance meaning 16
1.5 Force:the second level of speaker meaning 18
1.5.1 Understanding both utterance meaning and force 18
1.5.2 Understanding utterance meaning but not force 19
1.5.3 Understanding force but not utterance meaning 19
1.5.4 Understanding neither utterance meaning nor force 20
1.5.5 Interrelationship of utterance meaning and force 21
1.6 Definitions ofpragmatics(revisited) 21
1.6.1 Speaker meaning 21
1.6.2 Utterance interpretation 22
1.6.3 Pragmatics:meaning in interaction 22
1.7 Summary 23
2 Speech acts 28
2.1 J.L.Austin 28
2.2 Ordinary language philosophy 29
2.3 Logical positivism and truth conditional semantics 29
2.4 The performative hypothesis 32
2.4.1 Metalinguistic performatives 33
2.4.2 Ritual pefformatives 36
2.4.2.1 Felicity conditions 37
2.4.2.2 Explicit reference to felicity conditions 40
2.4.3 Collaborative performatives 40
2.4.4 Group performatives 41
2.4.5 Overlap of categories 42
2.4.6 Cross-cultural differences in use of performatives 43
2.4.7 Collapse of Austin's performative hypothesis 44
2.4.7.1 The grammatical distinctiveness of performatives 44
2.4.7.2 Do performatives always perform actions? 45
2.4.7.3 How to do things without performative verbs 46
2.4.8 Explicit and implicit performatives 47
2.5 Utterances as actions 49
2.5.1 Locution,illocution,perlocution 49
2.5.2 Speech acts 51
2.6 Conclusion 51
3 Conversational implicature 55
3.1 Introduction 55
3.2 H.P.Grice 56
3.3 Implicature 57
3.3.1 Conventional implicature 57
3.3.2 Conversational implicature 58
3.3.3 Implicature and inference 58
3.4 The Cooperative Principle 61
3.5 The four conversational maxims 63
3.5.1 Observing the maxims 64
3.5.2 Non-observance of the maxims 64
3.6 Flouting a maxim 65
3.6.1 Flouts necessitated by a clash between maxims 65
3.6.2 Flouts which exploit a maxim 67
3.6.2.1 Flouts exploiting the maxim of Quality 67
3.6.2.2 Flouts exploiting the maxim of Quantity 69
3.6.2.3 Flouts exploiting the maxim of Relation 70
3.6.2.4 Flouts exploiting the maxim of Manner 71
3.7 Other categories of non-observance of the conversational maxims 72
3.7.1 Violating a maxim 72
3.7.2 Infringing a maxim 74
3.7.3 Opting out of a maxim 74
3.7.4 Suspending a maxim 76
3.8 Testing for implicature 78
3.8.1 Non-detachability and non-conventionality 78
3.8.2 Implicature changes 80
3.8.3 Calculability 82
3.8.4 Defeasibility 82
3.9 Conclusion 84
4 Approaches to pragmatics 87
4.1 Introduction 87
4.2 Problems with Grice's theory 87
4.2.1 When is non-observance intentional? 88
4.2.2 Distinguishing between types of non-observance 90
4.2.3 Different nature of maxims 91
4.2.4 Maxims may overlap 91
4.2.5 Problems of calculability 92
4.3 Grice's informal approach 93
4.4 J.R.Searle 93
4.4.1 Indirect speech acts 93
4.4.2 Searle's conditions for speech acts 94
4.4.2.1 Distinguishing speech acts 96
4.4.2.2 Plugging the gaps in Searle's rules 98
4.4.2.3 The speech act of apologizing:a case study 99
4.4.2.4 Over-generality of rules 102
4.4.2.5 The speech act of warning:a case study 103
4.5 Searle's formal approach to the categorization of speech acts 105
4.6 Rules versus principles 107
4.6.1 Rules are all or nothing,principles are more or less 108
4.6.2 Rules are exclusive,principles can co-occur 108
4.6.3 Rules are constitutive,principles are regulative 109
4.6.4 Rules are definite,principles are probabilistic 110
4.6.5 Rules are conventional,principles are motivated 111
4.7 Conclusion 114
5 Pragmatics and indirectness 119
5.1 Introduction 119
5.2 Pragmatics and indirectness 119
5.2.1 Intentional indirectness 120
5.2.2 Indirectness is costly and risky 120
5.2.3 Assumption of rationality 121
5.2.4 The principle of expressibility 122
5.2.5 Indirectness—an illustration 123
5.3 How do we know how indirect to be? 124
5.3.1 Power 124
5.3.2 Social distance 128
5.3.3 Size of imposition 130
5.3.4 Rights and obligations 131
5.3.5 The negotiation of pragmatic parameters 131
5.4 Measuring indirectness 133
5.4.1 The role of context in interpreting indirectness 136
5.4.2 The role of belief in interpreting indirectness 137
5.4.3 Background knowledge and interpreting indirectness 138
5.4.4 The role of co-text in interpreting indirectness 138
5.4.5 Goals and the interpretation of indirectness 139
5.5 Why use indirectness? 142
5.5.1 Interestingness 143
5.5.2 Increasing the force of one's message 144
5.5.3 Competing goals 145
5.6 Conclusion 146
6 Theories of politeness 149
6.1 Introduction 149
6.2 Delimiting the concept of politeness 149
6.2.1 Politeness as a real-world goal 150
6.2.2 Deference versus politeness 150
6.2.3 Register 154
6.2.4 Politeness as an utterance level phenomenon 155
6.2.5 Politeness as a pragmatic phenomenon 157
6.3 Politeness explained in terms of principles and maxims 158
6.3.1 Ambivalence and politeness 158
6.3.2 Pragmatic principles 159
6.3.2.1 The Tact maxim 160
6.3.2.2 The Generosity maxim 162
6.3.2.3 The Approbation maxim 162
6.3.2.4 The Modesty maxim 163
6.3.2.5 The Agreement maxim 165
6.3.2.6 The Pollyanna Principle 166
6.3.3 Problems with Leech's approach 167
6.4 Politeness and the management of face 168
6.4.1 Face-threatening acts 169
6.4.1.1 Superstrategies for performing face-threatening acts 169
6.4.1.2 Performing an FTA without any redress(bald-on-record) 170
6.4.1.3 Performing an FTA with redress(positive politeness) 171
6.4.1.4 Performing an FTA with redress(negative politeness) 172
6.4.1.5 Performing an FTA using off-record politeness 173
6.4.1.6 Do not perform FTA 174
6.4.2 Criticisms of Brown and Levinson 176
6.5 Politeness viewed as a conversational contract 176
6.6 Politeness measured along pragmatic scales 177
6.7 Conclusion 178
7 The construction of meaning 183
7.1 Introduction 183
7.2 How does pragrnatics fit into linguistics? 184
7.3 Pragmatics versus sociolinguistics 185
7.3.1 Overlap between pragmatics and sociolinguistics 186
7.4 Activity types versus speech events 187
7.5 The construction of meaning 195
7.5.1 Pragmatic ambivalence 195
7.5.2 The collaborative nature of speech acts 196
7.5.3 The negotiability of force 198
7.5.4 Preparing the ground for a speech act 199
7.5.5 Successive utterances in situated discourse 201
7.5.6 Discoursal ambivalence 202
7.5.7 Dynamic pragmatics 203
7.6 What counts as evidence in pragmatics? 204
7.6.1 Perlocutionary effect 205
7.6.2 Explicit commentary by speaker 205
7.6.3 Explicit commentary by others 206
7.6.4 Co-text(subsequent discourse) 207
7.7 Conclusion 208
References 211
Index of Names 219
Index of Subjects 221
- 《思维的囚徒 活出生命的意义7原则》赵晓瑞译;(美)亚历克斯·佩塔克斯 2019
- 《现代汉语语用否定研究》王志英 2019
- 《计算机自适应英语语用能力测试系统设计与效度验证 以TEM4词汇与语法题为例》张一鑫著 2019
- 《精神分析引论》(奥)西格蒙德·弗洛伊德著;黄珊译 2019
- 《模糊集引论 上》罗承忠,于福生,曾文艺编著 2019
- 《跨文化交际过程中的语用失误研究》(中国)尹丕安 2019
- 《医患会话中医生诊疗话语的个体化意义建构研究》梁海英著 2019
- 《实用情报方法引论》郭卫真,赵景馥,贺琳等编著 1993
- 《中国学术思想研究辑刊 二十编 第9册 欧阳修《诗本义》研究新探 重估汉宋《诗经》学的转变与意义 上》陈战峰著 2015
- 《论中国文化的世界性意义:全国高校国际汉学(中国学)学术研讨会论文集》张西平 2018
- 《中风偏瘫 脑萎缩 痴呆 最新治疗原则与方法》孙作东著 2004
- 《水面舰艇编队作战运筹分析》谭安胜著 2009
- 《王蒙文集 新版 35 评点《红楼梦》 上》王蒙著 2020
- 《TED说话的力量 世界优秀演讲者的口才秘诀》(坦桑)阿卡什·P.卡里亚著 2019
- 《燕堂夜话》蒋忠和著 2019
- 《经久》静水边著 2019
- 《魔法销售台词》(美)埃尔默·惠勒著 2019
- 《微表情密码》(波)卡西亚·韦佐夫斯基,(波)帕特里克·韦佐夫斯基著 2019
- 《看书琐记与作文秘诀》鲁迅著 2019
- 《酒国》莫言著 2019