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Discourse and the Non-Native English Speaker (Hardcover, New)
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Discourse and the Non-Native English Speaker (Hardcover, New)
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English is now firmly established as an international language
around the globe and as such is no longer the preserve of the
native speaker and the inner circle of counties. It is estimated
that there are three times as many non-native speakers of English
as there are native speakers worldwide and that the majority of
speech events conducted in English are solely between non-native
speakers of the language. The increased use of the English language
on a daily basis by non-native speakers is thus worthy of a study
and the purpose of this book. For the non-native speaker, the
day-to-day demands of casual conversation can often be met through
collaboration and negotiation with their interlocutor. However,
there is an ever-increasing need for the non-native to participate
in specific speech events such as discussions, meetings,
interviews, and presentations, where the construction and delivery
of extended turns and monologues is paramount. This is particularly
true in professional and academic environments where this type of
discourse holds significance and value for the speaker, since it is
often through this that their proficiency and professionalism is
critiqued and measured. This book is a timely study into the nature
of extended discourse and the problems that non-native speakers
have in constructing this. The book considers a corpus of spoken
data taken from the International English Language Testing System
(IELTS) speaking test with an international dimension. It
specifically focuses on discourse that is multi-propositional, that
is, extended turns and monologues, and analyses this for breaks in
coherence and comprehensibility brought about by miscues in
semantic and pragmatic features at the discourse level. The main
thesis of the book is that the construction of extended discourse
carries with it an additional burden for the speaker, namely the
need to package information without support from the interlocutor
in such a way as to make a coherent interpretation possible. For
the mother-tongue speaker, the management of this packaging is of
second nature, but for the non-native, the removal of collaborative
support from the interlocutor in the form of back-channels and
negotiation of meaning leads to miscues at the discourse level
which impinge on coherence. As these miscues accumulate and
interact with each other, the coherence of the discourse is
diminished even further and in extreme cases a complete breakdown
in communication can be observed. Two key areas where these miscues
materialize are in the semantic consistency and pragmatic relevance
of the utterances as each one is added to the common ground.
Semantic consistency refers to the need to maintain the internal
specificity of utterances and the external consistency across
utterances, while pragmatic relevance refers to the need to make
contributions which are well-contextualized and relevant to the
on-going discourse. The book is both a textual and evaluative
approach to studying discourse. It contains copious examples of
transcribed non-native discourse with commentaries that indicate
where miscues arise and how these lead to a lack of coherence. The
book also describes in detail a manipulation experiment which looks
at the effect of repairing discourse on the perceived coherence,
thus evaluating the psycholinguistic reality of the identified
miscues. The book also considers the relationship of fluency to
coherence and how disfluent performance can impinge on perceived
coherence. The book will be of interest to applied linguistics and
English-language teaching practitioners around the world as well as
academics involved in the testing of spoken English. Aimed at
postgraduate level but accessible to undergraduates, it is a must
for anyone concerned with the teaching or studying of a second
language such as English and researchers working in the field of
discourse analysis.
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