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Books > Language & Literature > Language & linguistics > Semantics (meaning) > General
This book provides linguists with a clear, critical, and
comprehensive overview of theoretical and experimental work on
information structure. Leading researchers survey the main theories
of information structure in syntax, phonology, and semantics as
well as perspectives from psycholinguistics and other relevant
fields. Following the editors' introduction the book is divided
into four parts. The first, on theories of and theoretical
perspectives on information structure, includes chapters on topic,
prosody, and implicature. Part 2 covers a range of current issues
in the field, including focus, quantification, and sign languages,
while Part 3 is concerned with experimental approaches to
information structure, including processes involved in its
acquisition and comprehension. The final part contains a series of
linguistic case studies drawn from a wide variety of the world's
language families. This volume will be the standard guide to
current work in information structure and a major point of
departure for future research.
This one-volume work covers the West's oldest critical and academic discipline--the elements, structure, principles and techniques of rhetoric in literature, communication and more specifically, public speaking. Major figures and rhetoric in non-Western cultures are covered as well.
How Words Mean introduces a new approach to the role of words and
other linguistic units in the construction of meaning. It does so
by addressing the interaction between non-linguistic concepts and
the meanings encoded in language. It develops an account of how
words are understood when we produce and hear language in situated
contexts of use. It proposes two theoretical constructs, the
lexical concept and the cognitive model. These are central to the
accounts of lexical representation and meaning construction
developed, giving rise to the Theory of Lexical Concepts and
Cognitive Models (or LCCM Theory).
Vyvyan Evans integrates and advances recent developments in
cognitive science, particularly in cognitive linguistics and
cognitive psychology. He builds a framework for the understanding
and analysis of meaning that is at once descriptively adequate and
psychologically plausible. In so doing he also addresses current
issues in lexical semantics and semantic compositionality,
polysemy, figurative language, and the semantics of time and space,
and writes in a way that will be accessible to students of
linguistics and cognitive science at advanced undergraduate level
and above.
This book investigates the nature of generalization in language and
examines how language is known by adults and acquired by children.
It looks at how and why constructions are learned, the relation
between their forms and functions, and how cross-linguistic and
language-internal
generalizations about them can be explained.
Constructions at Work is divided into three parts: in the first
Professor Goldberg provides an overview of constructionist
approaches, including the constructionist approach to argument
structure, and argues for a usage-based model of grammar. In Part
II she addresses issues concerning how
generalizations are constrained and constructional generalizations
are learned. In Part III the author shows that a combination of
function and processing accounts for a wide range of
language-internal and cross-linguistic generalizations. She then
considers the degree to which the function of
constructions explains their distribution and examines
cross-linguistic tendencies in argument realization. She
demonstrates that pragmatic and cognitive processes account for the
data without appeal to stipulations that are language-specific.
This book is an important contribution to the study of how language
operates in the mind and in the world and how these operations
relate. It is of central interest for scholars and graduate-level
students in all branches of theoretical linguistics and
psycholinguistics. It will also appeal to
cognitive scientists and philosophers concerned with language and
its acquisition.
Rhetoric and rhetorical theory have been gaining in prominence
throughout the 20th century. As leaders in all fields give careful
attention to issues in communication, rhetoric becomes increasingly
central to a range of disciplines. Many of these leaders have
shaped rhetorical theory through their work in other fields, and
rhetoric becomes more and more difficult to define and delimit.
This reference is a guide to major trends and developments in
rhetoric and rhetorical theory during the last 100 years.
Included are alphabetically arranged entries for major and minor
rhetoricians, such as Mikhail Bakhtin, Roland Barthes, Wayne Booth,
Paul de Man, Jacques Derrida, Peter Elbow, and Linda Flower. Each
entry is written by an expert contributor and includes a brief
biography, an analysis of the figure's rhetorical theory, and a
current bibliography of primary and secondary sources. The figures
included represent a range of rhetorical schools. An extensive
introduction discusses these schools, and the volume concludes with
extensive bibliographical material.
This volume focuses on persuasion and the structure and analysis of
persuasive communication. It brings together contributions from
scholars from a variety of backgrounds in communication sciences
and psychology, with insights into the processing of persuasive
messages, attitude theory as viewed from a neural network model,
and models of resistance to influence. This series compiles
research from a range of disciplines such as information science,
library science, and international relations, that share the
unifying purpose of understanding communication and information
processing. It offers reviews of those diverse areas that fall
within the broad rubrics of information and communication science,
as well as an overview of how people use information. The volumes
report on research in three important areas: information transfer
and information systems; the uses and effects of communications;
and the control of communications and information.
If Edward Everett is remembered at all today, it is as the orator
who gave the other speech at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania on November
19, 1863. Ironically, Everett's oration, which was given wide
coverage in contemporary newspapers, was recognized as both
epideictic and argumentative. Everett defended the Union cause,
whereas Lincoln's speech was strictly ceremonial. A second irony
that attends Everett's oratorical career is that his countrymen
believed him to be one of the great orators of the time, the
undisputed master of ceremonial address. In this first new study of
Edward Everett's oratory, author Ronald Reid addresses the
historical and oratorical paradoxes that have influenced
perceptions of Everett's career. Reid reconstitutes the role of
epideictic rhetoric in the United States from the end of the
Revolutionary War to the eve of the Civil War and reinstates
Everett in the pantheon of great American orators. He demonstrates
why Everett fell into virtual obscurity and treats the reader to a
penetrating analysis of the role of public persuasion in the United
States during a critical period in its history. In Edward Everett:
Unionist Orator Reid effectively restores Everett to his rightful
rostrum in the unfolding national drama from the 1820s to the
1860s, providing a sweeping story of America's golden age of
oratory in the process. The book opens with a discussion of the
influence of Everett's eighteenth-century heritage on his desire to
save the Union at all costs. The author shows how the seeds of
Everett's Unionism were starting to sprout in his literary and
theological speeches and writings, and how he developed the
rhetorical methods that he would use throughout his career.Next,
Reid deals with Everett's oratory during his years of service,
first as a congressman and then as governor of Massachusetts. Here
he discusses Everett's increasing concern about the divisiveness of
the partisan and sectional causes he espoused. Chapters three and
four deal with Everett's modification of his earlier Unionist
strategies in an effort to deal with increasing sectionalism and
preserve the United States. In conclusion, Reid reviews Everett's
oratory, speculating about the role of epideictic oratory in
general in maintaining, or failing to maintain, social unity.
Sample speeches complete the work, which include a partial text of
one of Everett's congressional speeches, a 4th of July oration, his
"Character of Washington," and a partial text of Everett's
Gettysburg address.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
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