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This book describes language as a network of functional relations
involving a context which is also a network of functional
relations. The essays in Part I present several perspectives on the
theory of language as functional relations. The essays in Part II
discuss an oral text using a variety of functional perspectives.
All of the essays are by linguists interested in oral and written
texts who have achieved international recognition in their fields.
Illustrated in this book are cognitive, social construction, social
praxis and anthropological approaches to the description of text.
Currently in linguistics there is a movement towards careful use of
corpora in linguistic and text analysis. This movement has involved
the use of written corpora, spoken corpora and corpora which
consist of combinations of spoken and written text. But little
detailed discussion of the language of a single oral text from
multiple perspectives has been published. Most text analyzes
address written texts - often literary works. This book is among
the first to integrate the analysis of the language of spoken and
written texts.
Aimed at undergraduate and beginning graduate students, this work
covers the varieties of syntactic phenomena in different languages
and a method of analyzing and describing them. The method is based
on the concept of the syntactic construction, which is shared by
various views of language structure. In this particular
presentation, a construction is characterized as a combination of
obligatory and optional functions, and each of these functions is
related to a class of manifestations. Syntax as a whole is then
seen as interrelating constructions on the ranks (size-levels) of
the phrase, clause, and sentence. Besides the essential features of
phrase, clause, and sentence structures, there are chapters devoted
to special topics such as clitics, negation, clausal organization,
and voice and related devices.
This final book in The Affluent Worker series was originally
published in 1969. It contains the findings and conclusions on the
issues the research was specifically designed to investigate - the
extent of working class embourgeoisment. This thesis is examined in
the several contexts of work, sociability, social aspirations and
imagery, and so on. At all these points it is called into question
empirically and conceptually. In this volume which brings the
project to an end, the authors also take up again the broad
questions of class and politics out of which the investigation
originally sprang.
This 1968 volume, the second of The Affluent Worker monographs,
reports on the voting and political attitudes of highly paid manual
workers. As in the first book, the affluent workers studied are
employed in Luton, a town which benefited faster and more
consistently than almost any other in Britain from the economic
progress of the 'fifties and early 'sixties. The sample was chosen
as a 'critical' case to test some widely accepted views on the
assimilation of the working classes into patterns of middle-class
social life. On the basis of material from interviews, the authors
give an account of the workers' political orientations, and this is
followed by an analysis of voting in relationship to income house
ownership, social origin and trade union membership. The main
findings - that, despite their affluence, the majority of these
workers remain staunch supporters of the Labour Party - runs
counter to contemporary beliefs about working-class
embourgeoisement.
The affluent workers studied in this book, originally published in
1968, were employees of three major industrial concerns sited in
Luton at the time. The three firms were selected as being amongst
Luton's best-paying employers and also on account of their advanced
personnel and labour relations policies. This choice enabled
comparisons to be made between workers engaged in very different
types of production system. On the basis of material from
interviews and other data, the authors examine in detail workers'
experience of their industrial jobs, their relations with
workmates, and the nature of their attachment both to the
organizations which employ them and to their trade unions. This
study forms part of a larger project which was aimed at testing
empirically the thesis, which was most prevalent 1968, that of the
progressive assimilation of manual workers and their families into
the pattern of middle class social life.
The complex and hard-fought movement for political freedom in India
coincided with the rise of a wealthy capitalist class of Indian
industrialists who had profited under British rule. By 1947, these
prominent businessmen had forged a partnership with the
socialist-led Indian National Congress, and supported Jawaharlal
Nehru's implementation of a centrally-planned economy. In this
political history of modern India, David Lockwood traces the roots
of this capitalist class, concentrated in Bombay, Calcutta and the
west Bengal coal mining region, and examines British economic
policy in the nineteenth century. Indian capitalists, such as J.R.D
Tata of Tata Steel, established powerful relationships with
domestic governments throughout the period, holding indigenous
industrial conferences and supporting the swadeshi movement which
aimed to promote Indian-manufactured goods. The Indian Bourgeoisie
is a unique and important contribution to the lively debate on the
role of India's capitalists during the Raj and throughout the early
years of independence.
Currently there is a movement in linguistics towards careful use of
corpora in linguistic and text analysis, which has involved both
written and spoken corpora and those which combine spoken and
written text. Most text analyses address written texts - often
literary works - but detailed discussion of the language of a
single oral text from multiple perspectives has rarely been
published. This book is among the first to integrate the analysis
of the language of spoken and written texts. It describes language
as a network of functional relations involving a context which is
also a network of functional relations. The essays in Part One
present several perspectives on the theory of language as
functional relations; those in Part Two discuss a single oral text
using a variety of functional perspectives. All of the essays are
by linguists interested in oral and written texts, who have
achieved international recognition in their fields. Illustrated in
this book are cognitive, social construction, social praxis and
anthropological approaches to the description of text.
This book is designed to teach undergraduate and beginning graduate
students about the varieties of syntactic phenomena in different
languages and a method of analyzing and describing them. The method
is based on the concept of the syntactic construction, which is
shared by various views of language structure. In this particular
presentation, a construction is characterized as a combination of
obligatory and optional functions, and each of these functions is
related to a class of manifestations. Syntax as a whole is then
seen as interrelating constructions on the ranks (size-levels) of
the phrase, clause, and sentence.Besides the essential features of
phrase, clause, and sentence structures, there are chapters devoted
to special topics such as clitics, negation, clausal organization,
and voice and related devices.While the emphasis is on the actual
syntactic structures observable in the data, the relation of
syntactic phenomena to linguistic meaning is also considered. In
particular, the final chapter shows how account of syntax can often
be simplified if control from meaning structure is assumed.
Throughout the book, a distinction between meaningfulness and
syntactic-well formedness is consistently made.
This book describes language as a network of functional relations
involving a context which is also a network of functional
relations. The essays in Part I present several perspectives on the
theory of language as functional relations. The essays in Part II
discuss an oral text using a variety of functional perspectives.
All of the essays are by linguists interested in oral and written
texts who have achieved international recognition in their fields.
Illustrated in this book are cognitive, social construction, social
praxis and anthropological approaches to the description of text.
Currently in linguistics there is a movement towards careful use of
corpora in linguistic and text analysis. This movement has involved
the use of written corpora, spoken corpora and corpora which
consist of combinations of spoken and written text. But little
detailed discussion of the language of a single oral text from
multiple perspectives has been published. Most text analyzes
address written texts - often literary works. This book is among
the first to integrate the analysis of the language of spoken and
written texts.
This book is designed to teach undergraduate and beginning graduate
students how to understand, analyse and describe syntactic
phenomena in different languages. The book covers every aspect of
syntax from the basics to more specialised topics, such as clitics
which have grammatical importance but cannot be used in isolation,
and negation, in which a construction contradicts the meaning of a
sentence. The approach taken combines concepts from different
theoretical schools, which view syntax differently. These include
M. A. K. Halliday's systemic functional linguistics, the
stratificational school advocated by Sydney Lamb, and Kenneth L.
Pike's tagmemic model. The emphasis of the book is on syntactic
structures rather than linguistic meaning, and the book stresses
the difference between a well-formed sentence and a meaningful one.
The final chapter brings these two aspects together, to show the
connections between syntax and semology. Each chapter concludes
with exercises from a diverse range of languages and a list of
major technical terms. The book also includes a glossary as an
essential resource for students approaching this difficult subject
for the first time.
The complex and hard-fought movement for political freedom in India
coincided with the rise of a wealthy capitalist class of Indian
industrialists who had profited under British rule. By 1947, these
prominent businessmen had forged a partnership with the
socialist-led Indian National Congress, and supported Jawaharlal
Nehru's implementation of a centrally-planned economy. In this
political history of modern India, David Lockwood traces the roots
of this capitalist class, concentrated in Bombay, Calcutta and the
west Bengal coal mining region, and examines British economic
policy in the nineteenth century. Indian capitalists, such as J.R.D
Tata of Tata Steel, established powerful relationships with
domestic governments throughout the period, holding indigenous
industrial conferences and supporting the swadeshi movement which
aimed to promote Indian-manufactured goods. The Indian Bourgeoisie
is a unique and important contribution to the lively debate on the
role of India's capitalists during the Raj and throughout the early
years of independence.
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