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This book examines the topic of communication strategies, the ways
in which people seek to express themselves or understand what
someone else is saying or writing. Typically, the term has referred
to the strategies that non-native speakers use to address the
linguistic and pragmatic problems encountered in interactions with
native and non-native speakers of the language in question. Studies
adopting a psycholinguistic perspective are well represented and
updated in this volume. Other chapters re-examine communication
strategies from a sociolinguistic perspective, exploring the
strategies non-native speakers and their conversational partners
use to create shared meanings in ongoing discourse. These studies
reveal how communication strategies can serve to construct
participants' identities and social relationships. Finally, the
book incorporates a number of chapters which cover strategy-like
behaviour in other related areas, such as language pathology, child
bilingualism, normal native adult interaction, and mother tongue
education. These studies add fresh dimensions to the study of
communication strategies, showing how the concept can usefully be
extended beyond the realm of second language acquisition and use,
and pointing out the commonalities in many domains of language
behaviour.
This volume provides a variety of theoretical and analytical perspectives on misunderstanding within different types of spoken interaction/discourse - such as in news media interviews, legal and medical situations, communication by second language learners and between different cultural and social groups, and mistakes in everyday conversation.
This book examines the topic of communication strategies, the ways
in which people seek to express themselves or understand what
someone else is saying or writing. Typically, the term has referred
to the strategies that non-native speakers use to address the
linguistic and pragmatic problems encountered in interactions with
native and non-native speakers of the language in question. Studies
adopting a psycholinguistic perspective are well represented and
updated in this volume. Other chapters re-examine communication
strategies from a sociolinguistic perspective, exploring the
strategies non-native speakers and their conversational partners
use to create shared meanings in ongoing discourse. These studies
reveal how communication strategies can serve to construct
participants' identities and social relationships. Finally, the
book incorporates a number of chapters which cover strategy-like
behaviour in other related areas, such as language pathology, child
bilingualism, normal native adult interaction, and mother tongue
education. These studies add fresh dimensions to the study of
communication strategies, showing how the concept can usefully be
extended beyond the realm of second language acquisition and use,
and pointing out the commonalities in many domains of language
behaviour.
Misunderstanding is a pervasive phenomenon in social life,
sometimes with serious consequences for people's life chances.
Misunderstandings are especially hazardous in high-stakes events
such as job interviews or in the legal system. In unequal power
encounters, unsuccessful communication is regularly attributed to
the less powerful participant, especially when those participants
are members of an ethnic minority group. But even when
communicative events are not prestructured by participants'
differential positions in social hierarchies, misunderstandings
occur at different levels of interactional and social engagement.
Misunderstanding in Social Life examines such problematic talk in
ordinary conversation and different institutional settings,
including socializing events and story tellings, education and
assessment activities, and interviews in TV news broadcasts,
employment agencies, legal settings, and language testing. The
analyzed interactions are located in a variety of sociocultural
environments and conducted in a range of languages, including
English, French, German, Hebrew, Japanese, such language varieties
as Aboriginal Australian English and Maori New Zealand English, and
nonnative varieties. The original studies included in this volume
adopt a variety of theoretical perspectives, including
discourse-pragmatic approaches, conversation analysis,
interactional sociolinguistics, social constructionism,
tropological and narrative analysis. They represent multiple views
of misunderstanding as a multilayered discourse event.
This book addresses the acquisition of pragmatics in second and foreign language classrooms, offering two state-of-the-art survey chapters, and eleven chapters reporting the results of empirical research. All chapters have been written especially for this collection. The empirical studies cover three areas: incidental acquisition of pragmatics in instructed contexts, the effects of instruction in pragmatics, and the assessment of pragmatics ability. The studies address a number of areas in pragmatics, from speech acts and discourse markers to conversational routines and address terms, and represent a range of target languages and contexts in the US, Asia, and Europe. A wide array of research methodologies are also employed, from questionnaires to in-depth interviews and conversation analysis. The first collection of its kind, Pragmatics in Language Teaching offers a comprehensive and essential introduction to a rapidly growing area, and should be of interest to researchers and language teachers alike.
This is a collection of contributed essays on topics in interlanguage pragmatics, which is the study of how non-native speakers and listeners use their deficient communicative competence to cope with a variety of communicative tasks. This volume will be the first comprehensive study of this important linguistic topic.
Pragmatics & Language Learning Volume 12examines the
organization of second language and multilingual speakers' talk and
pragmatic knowledge across a range of naturalistic and experimental
activities. Based on data collected on Danish, English, Hawai'i
Creole, Indonesian, and Japanese as target languages, the
contributions explore the nexus of pragmatic knowledge,
interaction, and L2 learning outside and inside of educational
settings.
Talk-in-interaction: Multilingual perspectives (edited by Gabriele
Kasper & Hanh Thi Nguyen) offers original studies of
interaction in a range of languages and language varieties,
including Chinese, English, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, Swahili,
Thai, and Vietnamese; monolingual and bilingual interactions, and
activities designed for second or foreign language learning.
Conducted from the perspectives of conversation analysis and
membership categorization analysis, the chapters examine ordinary
conversation and institutional activities in face-to-face,
telephone, and computer-mediated environments. PRAGMATICS &
INTERACTION, a refereed series sponsored by the University of
Hawai'i National Foreign Language Resource Center, publishes
research on topics in pragmatics and discourse as social
interaction from a wide variety of theoretical and methodological
perspectives. P&I welcomes particularly studies on languages
spoken in the Asian-Pacific region.
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