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This textbook introduces the reader to contemporary approaches to
language analysis such as cognitive stylistics and corpus
stylistics, reflecting recent shifts in research trends and
offering students a practical way to access and understand these
developments. The authors lead readers through detailed
explanations, guided analyses, examples of research and suggestions
for further reading. This textbook makes an ideal
introduction to the field of stylistics for students who are new to
the area, but who have some background in basic language analysis.
It will be of use to students on courses in stylistics, literary
linguistics, corpus methods, cognitive linguistics, and language
and style.Â
Text World Theory is a powerful framework for discourse analysis
that, thus far, has only been used in monolingual Anglophone
stylistic analyses. This work adapts Text World Theory for the
analysis of Spanish discourse, and in doing so suggests some
improvements to the way in which it deals with discourse - in
particular, with direct speech and conditional expressions.
Furthermore, it applies Text World Theory in a novel way, searching
not for style in language, but for the style of a language.
Focusing principally on deixis and modality, the author examines
whether Spanish speakers and English speakers construct the
narrative text-world in any patterned ways. To do so, the 'frog
story' methodology is employed, eliciting spoken narratives from
native adult speakers of both languages by means of a children's
picture book. These narratives are transcribed and subjected to a
qualitative text-world analysis, which is supported with a
quantitative corpus analysis. The results reveal contrasts in
Spanish and English speakers' use of modality and deixis in
building the same narrative text-world, and are relevant to
scholars working in language typology, cross-cultural pragmatics
and translation studies. These novel applications of the Text World
Theory push the boundaries of stylistics in new directions,
broadening the focus from monolingual texts to languages at large.
Text World Theory is a powerful framework for discourse analysis
that, thus far, has only been used in monolingual Anglophone
stylistic analyses. This work adapts Text World Theory for the
analysis of Spanish discourse, and in doing so suggests some
improvements to the way in which it deals with discourse - in
particular, with direct speech and conditional expressions.
Furthermore, it applies Text World Theory in a novel way, searching
not for style in language, but for the style of a language.
Focusing principally on deixis and modality, the author examines
whether Spanish speakers and English speakers construct the
narrative text-world in any patterned ways. To do so, the 'frog
story' methodology is employed, eliciting spoken narratives from
native adult speakers of both languages by means of a children's
picture book. These narratives are transcribed and subjected to a
qualitative text-world analysis, which is supported with a
quantitative corpus analysis. The results reveal contrasts in
Spanish and English speakers' use of modality and deixis in
building the same narrative text-world, and are relevant to
scholars working in language typology, cross-cultural pragmatics
and translation studies. These novel applications of the Text World
Theory push the boundaries of stylistics in new directions,
broadening the focus from monolingual texts to languages at large.
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