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In Other Words
Variation in Reference and Narrative
Explores the ways that words and meanings are re-used in new contexts for new listeners.
Deborah Schiffrin (Author)
9780521484749, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 9 February 2006
390 pages, 10 tables
23 x 15.2 x 2.5 cm, 0.636 kg
What we say always consists of prior words, structures and meanings that are combined in new ways and re-used in new contexts for new listeners. In this book, Deborah Schiffrin looks at two important tasks of language - presenting 'who' we are talking about (the referent) and 'what happened' to them (their actions and attributes) in a narrative - and explores how this presentation alters in relation to emergent forms and meanings. Drawing on examples from both face-to-face talk and public discourse, she analyses a variety of repairs, reformulations of referents, and retellings of narratives, ranging from word-level repairs within a single turn-at-talk, to life story narratives told years apart. Bringing together work from conversation analysis, interactional sociolinguistics, cognitive semantics, pragmatics, and variation analysis, In Other Words will be invaluable for scholars wishing to understand the many different factors that underlie the shaping and re-shaping of discourse over time, place and person.
1. Variation
2. Problematic referrals
3. Anticipating referrals
4. Reactive and proactive prototypes
5. Referring sequences
6. Reframing experience
7. Retelling a story
8. Who did what (again)?
9. Redoing and replaying.
Subject Areas: Linguistics [CF]
