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This collection offers a thorough treatment of the ways in which
the verbal and visual semiotic modes interrelate toward promoting
gender equality and social inclusion in children’s picture books.
Drawing on cutting-edge theoretical work in multimodality,
including multimodal cognitive linguistics, multimodal discourse
analysis, and visual social semiotics, the book expands on
descriptive-oriented studies to offer a more linguistically driven
perspective on children’s picture books. The volume explores the
choice afforded to and the lexico-semantic and discursive
strategies employed by writers and illustrators in conveying
representational, interpersonal, and textual meanings in the verbal
and non-verbal components in these narratives in order to challenge
gender stereotypes and promote the social inclusion of same-sex
parent families. This book will be of particular interest to
students and scholars in multimodality, discourse analysis, social
semiotics, and children’s literature. Chapters 1 & 8 of this
book are freely available as downloadable Open Access PDFs under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0
license available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com.
Interpersonal communication (IC) is a continuous game between the
interacting interactants. It is a give and take - a continuous,
dynamic flow that is linguistically realized as discourse as an
on-going sequence of interactants' moves. Interpersonal
communication is produced and interpreted by acting linguistically,
and this makes it a fascinating research area. The handbook,
Interpersonal Communication , examines how interactants manage to
exchange facts, ideas, views, opinions, beliefs, emotion, etc. by
using the linguistic systems and the resources they offer. In
interpersonal communication, the fine-tuning of individuals' use of
the linguistic resources is continuously probed. The language used
in interpersonal communication enhances social relations between
interactants and keeps the interaction on the normal track. When
interaction gets off the track, linguistic miscommunication may
also destroy social relationships. This volume is essentially
concerned with this fine-tuning in discourse, and how it is
achieved among various interactant groups. The volume departs from
the following fundamental questions: How do interpersonal relations
manifest themselves in language? What is the role of language in
developing and maintaining relationships in interpersonal
communication? What types of problems occur in interpersonal
communication and what kind of strategies and means are used to
solve them? How does linguistically realized interpersonal
communication interact with other semiotic modes? Interpersonal
communication is seen and researched from the perspective of what
is being said or written, and how it is realized in various generic
forms. The current research also gives attention to other semiotic
modes which interact with the linguistic modes. It is not just the
social roles of interactants in groups, the possible media
available, the non-verbal behaviors, the varying contextual frames
for communication, but primarily the actual linguistic
manifestations that we need to focus upon when we want to have a
full picture of what is going on in human interpersonal
communication. It is this linguistic perspective that the volume
aims to present to all researchers interested in IC. The volume
offers an overview of the theories, methods, tools, and resources
of linguistically-oriented approaches, e.g. from the fields of
linguistics, social psychology, sociology, and semiotics, for the
purpose of integration and further development of the interests in
IC., Topics e.g.: Orientation to interaction as primarily
linguistically realized processes Expertise on theorizing and
analyzing cultural and situational contexts where linguistic
processes are realized Expertise on handling language corpora
Expertise on theorizing and analyzing interaction types as genres
Orientation to an integrated view of linguistic and non-linguistic
participant activities and of how interactants generate meanings
and interact with space Expertise on researching the management of
the linguistic flow in interaction and its successfulness.
This book focuses ona hitherto neglected area of research within
the fields of academic and professinal descourse: teh language of
conferencing. The volume represents a reange of perspectives, from
the conference as a whole event to the conferenfe as a system of
potential genres, within a given discourse community. Somne
discourse feataures of conference language are examined in detail,
such as stretegies for politeness and other interpersonal
management dur9ng presentations and discussions. The pedagogical
implications of conference research are also addressed; in indeed
there is a growing need for such a focus. Novice conference
participants need explicit linguistic description fo the training
in, the relevant generes to enable them to become fullyfledged
members of their professional discourse communites. Additionally,
the work in this volume makes a valuable contribution to the
understanding of he intercultura and educational dimensions of the
increasing dominance of English as an international lingua
franca--in conferences and beyond. Contents: Eija Ventola/Celia
Shalom/Susan Thompson: Introduction--Eija Ventola: Why and what
kind of focus on confernce presentations?--Celia Shalom: The
academic confernce: A forum for enacting genere knowledge--Chrisine
Raisanen: The conference forum: A system of interrelated genres and
discursive practices--Elizabeth Rowley-Jolivet: Science in
themaking: Scientific conference presentations and the construction
of facts--Anni Heino/Eija Tervonen/Jorma Tommola: Metadiscourse in
academic conference presentations--Susan Thompson" 'As the story
unfolds': The uses of narrative in research presentations--Cassily
Charles/Eija Ventola: A multi-semioticgenre: The conference slide
show--Monique Frobert-Adamo: Humour in oral presentations: what's
the joke?--Pauline Webber: The paper is now open for
discussion--Irena Vassileva: Speaker-audience interaction: the case
of BUlgarians presenting in English--Tatyana Yakhontova: Titles of
conference presentation obstracts: a cross-cultural
perspective-Viktor Slepovitch: English as a conference language for
students and prospects--David banks: The French scientist and
English as a conference language--Eija Ventola: Should I speak
English or German?--Conferencing and language code issues--Eija
Ventola/Celia Shalom/ Susan Thompson: Afterwood.
TRENDS IN LINGUISTICS is a series of books that open new
perspectives in our understanding of language. The series publishes
state-of-the-art work on core areas of linguistics across
theoretical frameworks, as well as studies that provide new
insights by approaching language from an interdisciplinary
perspective. TRENDS IN LINGUISTICS considers itself a forum for
cutting-edge research based on solid empirical data on language in
its various manifestations, including sign languages. It regards
linguistic variation in its synchronic and diachronic dimensions as
well as in its social contexts as important sources of insight for
a better understanding of the design of linguistic systems and the
ecology and evolution of language. TRENDS IN LINGUISTICS publishes
monographs and outstanding dissertations as well as edited volumes,
which provide the opportunity to address controversial topics from
different empirical and theoretical viewpoints. High quality
standards are ensured through anonymous reviewing. To discuss your
book idea or submit a proposal, please contact Birgit Sievert.
This collection offers a thorough treatment of the ways in which
the verbal and visual semiotic modes interrelate toward promoting
gender equality and social inclusion in children's picture books.
Drawing on cutting-edge theoretical work in multimodality,
including multimodal cognitive linguistics, multimodal discourse
analysis, and visual social semiotics, the book expands on
descriptive-oriented studies to offer a more linguistically driven
perspective on children's picture books. The volume explores the
choice afforded to and the lexico-semantic and discursive
strategies employed by writers and illustrators in conveying
representational, interpersonal, and textual meanings in the verbal
and non-verbal components in these narratives in order to challenge
gender stereotypes and promote the social inclusion of same-sex
parent families. This book will be of particular interest to
students and scholars in multimodality, discourse analysis, social
semiotics, and children's literature. Chapters 1 & 8 of this
book are freely available as downloadable Open Access PDFs under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0
license available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com.
Interpersonal communication (IC) is a continuous game between the
interacting interactants. It is a give and take - a continuous,
dynamic flow that is linguistically realized as discourse as an
on-going sequence of interactants' moves. Interpersonal
communication is produced and interpreted by acting linguistically,
and this makes it a fascinating research area. The handbook,
Interpersonal Communication , examines how interactants manage to
exchange facts, ideas, views, opinions, beliefs, emotion, etc. by
using the linguistic systems and the resources they offer. In
interpersonal communication, the fine-tuning of individuals' use of
the linguistic resources is continuously probed. The language used
in interpersonal communication enhances social relations between
interactants and keeps the interaction on the normal track. When
interaction gets off the track, linguistic miscommunication may
also destroy social relationships. This volume is essentially
concerned with this fine-tuning in discourse, and how it is
achieved among various interactant groups. The volume departs from
the following fundamental questions: How do interpersonal relations
manifest themselves in language? What is the role of language in
developing and maintaining relationships in interpersonal
communication? What types of problems occur in interpersonal
communication and what kind of strategies and means are used to
solve them? How does linguistically realized interpersonal
communication interact with other semiotic modes? Interpersonal
communication is seen and researched from the perspective of what
is being said or written, and how it is realized in various generic
forms. The current research also gives attention to other semiotic
modes which interact with the linguistic modes. It is not just the
social roles of interactants in groups, the possible media
available, the non-verbal behaviors, the varying contextual frames
for communication, but primarily the actual linguistic
manifestations that we need to focus upon when we want to have a
full picture of what is going on in human interpersonal
communication. It is this linguistic perspective that the volume
aims to present to all researchers interested in IC. The volume
offers an overview of the theories, methods, tools, and resources
of linguistically-oriented approaches, e.g. from the fields of
linguistics, social psychology, sociology, and semiotics, for the
purpose of integration and further development of the interests in
IC., Topics e.g.: Orientation to interaction as primarily
linguistically realized processes Expertise on theorizing and
analyzing cultural and situational contexts where linguistic
processes are realized Expertise on handling language corpora
Expertise on theorizing and analyzing interaction types as genres
Orientation to an integrated view of linguistic and non-linguistic
participant activities and of how interactants generate meanings
and interact with space Expertise on researching the management of
the linguistic flow in interaction and its successfulness.
Positioned within the field of linguistics and multisemiotic
discourse analysis, the theme of this book is the multifaceted
interaction between text and image in different discourse genres,
and it offers critical views on how we talk and show our experience
of the world around us.
Positioned within the field of linguistics and multisemiotic
discourse analysis, the theme of this book is the multifaceted
interaction between text and image in different discourse genres,
and it offers critical views on how we talk and show our experience
of the world around us.
Writing is crucial to the academic world. It is the main mode of
communication among scientists and scholars and also a means for
students for obtaining their degrees. The papers in this volume
highlight the intercultural, generic and textual complexities of
academic writing. Comparisons are made between various traditions
of academic writing in different cultures and contexts and the
studies combine linguistic analyses with analyses of the social
settings in which academic writing takes place and is acquired. The
common denominator for the papers is writing in English and
attention is given to native-English writers' and non-native
writers' problems in different disciplines. The articles in the
book introduce a variety of methodological approaches for analyses
and search for better teaching methods and ways of improving the
syllabi of writing curricula. The book as a whole illustrates how
linguists strive for new research methods and practical
applications in applied linguistics.
This book shares the recent debates by systemic functional
linguistics and other linguistic forums. Its principal focus is on
how we use language to make meaning of the world, on how the
systems and structures of the ideational function of language
represent the realisation of our experiences of the world around
us. The volume captures the endeavours of scholars working in
different contexts, disciplines and languages around the world.
Their contributions explore what underlies experiential and logical
meaning-making through specific analyses of recently-created,
contextually diverse, single texts or collections of texts, from
mono- to multimodal texts. The issues addressed are: layers of
meaning through the transitivity system; agency and subjectivity;
what kinds of participants and circumstances are associated with
various processes and how these vary across languages; new ways of
researching and capturing the interaction of the experiential
function with the other functions of language - interpersonal,
textual and logical - in communicative contexts; how multimodality
and new ways of modelling experience semiotically influence the
work of linguists, linguistic description and application. The book
displays the dynamic dialogue on theoretical and applied interests
of scholars interested in functional linguistics and working in a
wide range of academic contexts. At post-graduate level advanced
students will benefit from new perspectives, the innovative
thinking and research accounts that make up the collection. The
papers highlight the flexibility of systemic functional linguistic
approach and exemplify how it can offer deeper and further insights
into potential ways of exploring meaning-making by drawing on
recent seminal developments in ideation.
This book focuses ona hitherto neglected area of research within
the fields of academic and professinal descourse: teh language of
conferencing. The volume represents a reange of perspectives, from
the conference as a whole event to the conferenfe as a system of
potential genres, within a given discourse community. Somne
discourse feataures of conference language are examined in detail,
such as stretegies for politeness and other interpersonal
management dur9ng presentations and discussions. The pedagogical
implications of conference research are also addressed; in indeed
there is a growing need for such a focus. Novice conference
participants need explicit linguistic description fo the training
in, the relevant generes to enable them to become fullyfledged
members of their professional discourse communites. Additionally,
the work in this volume makes a valuable contribution to the
understanding of he intercultura and educational dimensions of the
increasing dominance of English as an international lingua
franca--in conferences and beyond. Contents: Eija Ventola/Celia
Shalom/Susan Thompson: Introduction--Eija Ventola: Why and what
kind of focus on confernce presentations?--Celia Shalom: The
academic confernce: A forum for enacting genere knowledge--Chrisine
Raisanen: The conference forum: A system of interrelated genres and
discursive practices--Elizabeth Rowley-Jolivet: Science in
themaking: Scientific conference presentations and the construction
of facts--Anni Heino/Eija Tervonen/Jorma Tommola: Metadiscourse in
academic conference presentations--Susan Thompson" 'As the story
unfolds': The uses of narrative in research presentations--Cassily
Charles/Eija Ventola: A multi-semioticgenre: The conference slide
show--Monique Frobert-Adamo: Humour in oral presentations: what's
the joke?--Pauline Webber: The paper is now open for
discussion--Irena Vassileva: Speaker-audience interaction: the case
of BUlgarians presenting in English--Tatyana Yakhontova: Titles of
conference presentation obstracts: a cross-cultural
perspective-Viktor Slepovitch: English as a conference language for
students and prospects--David banks: The French scientist and
English as a conference language--Eija Ventola: Should I speak
English or German?--Conferencing and language code issues--Eija
Ventola/Celia Shalom/ Susan Thompson: Afterwood.
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