RISS 학술연구정보서비스

검색
다국어 입력

http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.

변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.

예시)
  • 中文 을 입력하시려면 zhongwen을 입력하시고 space를누르시면됩니다.
  • 北京 을 입력하시려면 beijing을 입력하시고 space를 누르시면 됩니다.
닫기
    인기검색어 순위 펼치기

    RISS 인기검색어

      Approaching dialogue : talk, interaction and contexts in dialogical perspectives

      한글로보기

      https://www.riss.kr/link?id=M7358546

      • 저자
      • 발행사항

        Amsterdam ; Philadelphia, PA : J. Benjamins Pub. Co., 1998

      • 발행연도

        1998

      • 작성언어

        영어

      • 주제어
      • DDC

        401/.41 판사항(21)

      • ISBN

        1556198523 (hbk. : alk. paper)
        9781556198526 (hbk. : alk. paper)
        1588110915 (pbk.)
        9781588110916 (pbk.)
        9027218331 (hbk. : Eur.)
        9789027218339 (hbk. : Eur.)
        9027218463 (pbk. : Eur.)
        9789027218469 (pbk. : Eur.)

      • 자료형태

        단행본(다권본)

      • 발행국(도시)

        네덜란드

      • 서명/저자사항

        Approaching dialogue : talk, interaction and contexts in dialogical perspectives / Per Linell.

      • 형태사항

        xvii, 330 p. ; 25 cm.

      • 총서사항

        Impact, studies in language and society, 1385-7908 ; v. 3 Impact, studies in language and society ; 3.

      • 일반주기명

        Includes bibliographical references (p. [289]-320) and index.

      • 소장기관
        • 고려대학교 도서관 소장기관정보 Deep Link
        • 국립중앙도서관 국립중앙도서관 우편복사 서비스
        • 서강대학교 도서관 소장기관정보 Deep Link
        • 서울대학교 사회과학도서관 Deep Link
        • 연세대학교 학술문화처 도서관 소장기관정보 Deep Link
        • 울산대학교 도서관 소장기관정보
        • 한림대학교 도서관 소장기관정보
        • 한양대학교 중앙도서관 소장기관정보
      • 0

        상세조회
      • 0

        다운로드
      서지정보 열기
      • 내보내기
      • 내책장담기
      • 공유하기
      • 오류접수

      부가정보

      목차 (Table of Contents)

      • CONTENTS
      • Table of Contents = ⅴ
      • Preface = xiii
      • PART Ⅰ. Monologism and Dialogism Contrasted
      • CHAPTER I Perspectives on language and discourse = 3
      • CONTENTS
      • Table of Contents = ⅴ
      • Preface = xiii
      • PART Ⅰ. Monologism and Dialogism Contrasted
      • CHAPTER I Perspectives on language and discourse = 3
      • 1.1 Language as system vs. language in practice = 3
      • 1.2 Discourse : Individuals' use of language or interactions-in-contexts = 5
      • 1.3 Dialogism, dialogicality and dialogue = 8
      • 1.4 The traditional conflation of 'dialogism' and 'dialogue = 9
      • 1.5 Dialogue : Interaction between co-present individuals through symbolic means = 12
      • CHAPTER 2. Monologism : Its basic assumptions = 17
      • 2.1 Cognition and communication as empirically distinct phenomena = 17
      • 2.2 Cognition as information processing by individuals = 18
      • 2.3 The transfer-and-exchange model of communication = 21
      • 2.4 The code model of language structure = 24
      • 2.5 The indirect dependence on written language in monologism = 27
      • 2.6 The ontological assumptions of monologism = 32
      • CHAPTER 3. Dialogism : Some historical roots and present-day trends = 35
      • 3.1 Interactions, contexts and social (re)construction = 35
      • 3.2 Dialogism of classical times = 37
      • 3.3 Before the 20th century = 38
      • 3.4 Some 20th century traditions = 40
      • 3.4.1 Phenomenology : Perspectives and multiple realities = 40
      • 3.4.2 Pragmatism : The gradual emergence of meaning = 43
      • 3.4.3 Symbolic interactionism and social behaviourism : The three-step model of communicative interaction = 44
      • 3.4.4 Sociocultural theory : Activity types and semiotic mediation = 46
      • 3.4.5 Summary : Some dialogistic ideas = 48
      • 3.5 Some present-day research traditions. : Empirical studies of discourse in interaction and contexts = 49
      • CHAPTER 4. Language structure and linguistic practices = 55
      • 4.1 The monologistic theory : Social realism plus individualism = 55
      • 4.2 Radical interactionism = 57
      • 4.3 Social constructionism = 59
      • PART Ⅱ. Interacting and making sense in contexts
      • CHAPTER 5. The dynamics of dialogue = 67
      • 5.I Conversation as the habitat of dialogical principles = 67
      • 5.2 The sequential organization of a social activity = 69
      • 5.3 Coordination and synchronization of utterance segments in dialogue - = 71
      • 5.4 Co-accomplishment in concerted activities = 73
      • 5.5 Interaction as expressing and testing mutual understanding = 77
      • 5.6 The local production of meaning and coherence = 80
      • 5.7 Dialogue as a series of opportunities for relevant continuations = 82
      • 5.8 The dynamics of discourse units = 84
      • 5.9 Summary : Some dialogical principles = 85
      • 5.9.1 Sequentiality = 85
      • 5.9.2 Joint construction = 86
      • 5.9.3 Act-activity interdependence = 87
      • 5.9.4 A superordinate principle : Reflexivity between discourse and contexts = 88
      • 5.10 Differing perspectives on dialogicality = 89
      • CHAPTER 6. Speakers and listeners = 91
      • 6.1 Monological speakers or dialogical interlocutors = 91
      • 6.2 Speaking : The production of utterances? = 92
      • 6.3 Embodied minds and persons in interaction = 96
      • 6.4 The production of utterance meaning = 97
      • 6.4.1 Reference and situated description = 98
      • 6.4.2 Responsive properties = 99
      • 6.4.3 Obligational aspects = 100
      • 6.4.4 The 'why' of communication = 100
      • 6.4.5 Social languages = 101
      • 6.5 The role of the speaker's partners in authoring utterances = 101
      • 6.5.1 The addressee = 102
      • 6.5.2 Other listeners = 104
      • 6.5.3 Principals and remote audiences = 107
      • 6.6 Conclusion = 109
      • CHAPTER 7. Sense-making in discourse and the situated fixation of linguistic meanings = 111
      • 7.1 Linguistic meaning and situated interpretation = 111
      • 7.2 Meaning in fixed codes and fixed contexts, or accomplishments in situated activities = 112
      • 7.3 Situatedness : Contextualization, decontextualization and recontextualization = 115
      • 7.4 The nature of lexical meanings : Stable features or dynamic potentials? = 118
      • 7.5 Fixed word meanings or temporary fixations = 121
      • CHAPTER 8. Contexts in discourse and discourse in contexts = 127
      • 8.1 The incompleteness of language = 127
      • 8.2 Types of contextual resources = 128
      • 8.3 Dimensions of contexts : cross-classifying contexts and contextual resources = 131
      • 8.4 Two perspectives on contexts of discourse = 134
      • 8.5 Some additional properties of contexts = 136
      • 8.5.1 Backgrounding = 136
      • 8.5.2 Relevance = 137
      • 8.5.3 Partial sharedness = 138
      • 8.5.4 Dynamics of utterance, contexts and understanding = 139
      • 8.6 Recontextualizations at the micro-level ; selective use of cotextual resources = 140
      • 8.7 Fragments of discourses and contexts = 144
      • 8.8 Local decontextualizations = 148
      • 8.9 Perspectival conflicts and competing context spaces = 151
      • 8.10 Recontextualizations at a global level : Intertextuality and interdiscursivity = 154
      • CHAPTER 9. Elementary contributions to discourse = 159
      • 9.1 Elementary building-blocks : Utterances, idea units and turns at talk = 159
      • 9.2 The response-initiative structure of contributions to dialogue = 161
      • 9.3 Excursus : The elements of social action = 166
      • 9.4 Varieties of contributions to dialogue = 169
      • 9.5 Utterances that are not full-fledged contributions to dialogue = 173
      • 9.6 Initiative and response as relational aspects of turns = 175
      • 9.7 Coding elementary contributions to dialogue = 177
      • 9.8 The dialogicality of larger units of discourse = 178
      • CHAPTER 10. Episodes and topics = 181
      • 10.1 Topic progression in the flow of discourse = 181
      • 10.2 The joint production of a topic = 183
      • 10.3 Episodes : units of natural social interaction = 186
      • 10.4 Monotopical and polytopical episodes = 188
      • 10.5 Non-topical episodes = 190
      • 10.6 Local and global coherence = 191
      • 10.7 Topical trajectories and transitions between episodes = 193
      • 10.8 Topical development in monologue = 195
      • 10.9 Episodes as the locus for creating temporarily shared understanding = 198
      • 10.10 The gradual determination of indeterminate topics = 200
      • 10.11 Episodes and topics as emergent and dynamic events = 200
      • 10.12 Units of talk-in-interaction = 202
      • CHAPTER 11. Communicative projects = 207
      • 11.1 Communicative actions as interactions = 207
      • 11.2 Speech act theory : Monological acts by individual speakers = 208
      • 11.3 Intentionality and responsibility = 211
      • 11.4 From speech acts to local sequences, language games and communicative projects = 212
      • 11.5 The notion of a 'communicative project' : A first approximation = 217
      • 11.6 Communicative projects : Asymmetrical participation and collective accomplishment = 220
      • 11.7 Limits to sharedness : Misalignment of parties' projects, and coordination of competing goals = 224
      • 11.8 The nested nature of projects = 225
      • 11.9 Communicative strategies : Methods of accomplishing communicative projects = 227
      • 11.10 The past- and future-orientation of communicative projects = 230
      • 11.11 'Communicative project' as a discourse-analytic concept = 231
      • CHAPTER 12. Situation definitions, activity types and communicative genres = 235
      • 12.1 Activity types as situation definitions = 235
      • 12.2 Communicative genres = 238
      • 12.3 Genres of 'ordinary conversation' = 241
      • 12.4 The global structure of activities : Core activities and phase structure = 243
      • 12.5 Communication in relation to non-communicative activities = 244
      • 12.6 Coherence, relevance and topic progression as activity-dependent = 249
      • 12.7 The creative accomplishment of routines within genres = 253
      • 12.8 The partial sharedness of activities and genres = 254
      • 12.9 Classifying communicative activities in families = 257
      • PART Ⅲ. Monologism and dialogism reconciled? = 261
      • CHAPTER 13. Dialogism : opportunities and limitations = 263
      • 13.1 Dialogical principles and the theory of discourse structure = 263
      • 13.2 Dialogue theory and empirical methods = 265
      • 13.3 Extending dialogue theory : A general epistemology for communication and cognition = 266
      • 13.3.1 Monological speech and thought = 267
      • 13.3.2 Dialogism and written texts = 268
      • 13.4 Dialogism as opposed to radical social constructionism = 270
      • 13.4.1 Subjects and agency = 270
      • 13.4.2 The material basis as constraints on discursive construction = 271
      • 13.5 Dialogism as a context-specific framework = 274
      • 13.6 The limits of dialogism = 275
      • CHAPTER 14. Reconstructing monologism as a special case = 277
      • 14.1 Monologism and dialogism as perspectivized frameworks = 277
      • 14.2 In support of monologistic practices = 278
      • 14.3 From decontextualizing practices to decontextualized theories = 281
      • 14.4 Conclusion = 286
      • References = 289
      • Appendix : Transcription conventions = 321
      • Index = 323
      더보기

      온라인 도서 정보

      온라인 서점 구매

      온라인 서점 구매 정보
      서점명 서명 판매현황 종이책 전자책 구매링크
      정가 판매가(할인율) 포인트(포인트몰)
      알라딘

      Approaching Dialogue (Hardcover) - Talk, Interaction and Contexts in Dialogical Perspectives

      판매중 315,000원 283,500원 (10%)

      종이책 구매

      8,510포인트
      예스24.com

      Approaching Dialogue

      판매중 315,000원 283,500원 (10%)

      종이책 구매

      14,180포인트 (5%)
      • 포인트 적립은 해당 온라인 서점 회원인 경우만 해당됩니다.
      • 상기 할인율 및 적립포인트는 온라인 서점에서 제공하는 정보와 일치하지 않을 수 있습니다.
      • RISS 서비스에서는 해당 온라인 서점에서 구매한 상품에 대하여 보증하거나 별도의 책임을 지지 않습니다.

      분석정보

      View

      상세정보조회

      0

      Usage

      원문다운로드

      0

      대출신청

      0

      복사신청

      0

      EDDS신청

      0

      동일 주제 내 활용도 TOP

      더보기

      이 자료와 함께 이용한 RISS 자료

      나만을 위한 추천자료

      해외이동버튼