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This edited book focuses on speech etiquette, examining the rules
that govern communication in various online communities:
professional, female, and ethnospecific. The contributors analyze
online communication in the Slavic languages Russian, Slovak,
Polish, and Belarusian, showing how the concept of speech etiquette
differs from the concept of politeness, although both reflect the
relationship between people in interaction. Online communities are
united on the basis of common informative or phatic illocutions
among their participants, and their speech etiquette is manifested
in stable forms of conducting discussions - stimulating and
responding. Each group has its own ideas of unacceptable speech
behavior and approaches to sanitation, and the rules of speech
etiquette in each group determine the degree of rapport and
distancing between the participants in discourse. The chapters in
this book explore how rapport and distance are established through
acts such as showing attention to the addressee and increasing his
or her communicative status; reducing or increasing the
illocutionary power of evaluations and motivations; and evaluating
one's own or someone else's speech. The volume will be of interest
to researchers studying online communication in such diverse fields
as linguistics, sociology, anthropology, programming, and media
studies.
The Ethics of Humour in Online Slavic Media Communication is
devoted to research on how the rules of humour used online media
are changing and how these changes rearrange the traditions of
speech interaction in media communication. The authors of the book
are experienced researchers in the field of Slavic media
linguistics and represent five neighbouring countries: Russia,
Belarus, Lithuania, Slovakia, and Poland. The research in the
volume is based on the data from Slavic languages. The diversity
and, at the same time, relative proximity of Slavic languages make
it possible to put separate studies into a wider comparative
context, in order to reveal the general and ethno-cultural patterns
in using means of communicative etiquette; it helps define the
ethno-cultural factors behind the formation of such means. Speech
practice of humour creation shows the creative potential of all
languages, including the ones with a small number of speakers –
Slovak and Belarusian, which have the status of state languages,
but are strongly influenced by international languages (English and
Russian). This volume is a valuable resource for researchers in the
field of Slavic studies.
The Ethics of Humour in Online Slavic Media Communication is
devoted to research on how the rules of humour used online media
are changing and how these changes rearrange the traditions of
speech interaction in media communication. The authors of the book
are experienced researchers in the field of Slavic media
linguistics and represent five neighbouring countries: Russia,
Belarus, Lithuania, Slovakia, and Poland. The research in the
volume is based on the data from Slavic languages. The diversity
and, at the same time, relative proximity of Slavic languages make
it possible to put separate studies into a wider comparative
context, in order to reveal the general and ethno-cultural patterns
in using means of communicative etiquette; it helps define the
ethno-cultural factors behind the formation of such means. Speech
practice of humour creation shows the creative potential of all
languages, including the ones with a small number of speakers -
Slovak and Belarusian, which have the status of state languages,
but are strongly influenced by international languages (English and
Russian). This volume is a valuable resource for researchers in the
field of Slavic studies.
This edited book focuses on speech etiquette, examining the rules
that govern communication in various online communities:
professional, female, and ethnospecific. The contributors analyze
online communication in the Slavic languages Russian, Slovak,
Polish, and Belarusian, showing how the concept of speech etiquette
differs from the concept of politeness, although both reflect the
relationship between people in interaction. Online communities are
united on the basis of common informative or phatic illocutions
among their participants, and their speech etiquette is manifested
in stable forms of conducting discussions - stimulating and
responding. Each group has its own ideas of unacceptable speech
behavior and approaches to sanitation, and the rules of speech
etiquette in each group determine the degree of rapport and
distancing between the participants in discourse. The chapters in
this book explore how rapport and distance are established through
acts such as showing attention to the addressee and increasing his
or her communicative status; reducing or increasing the
illocutionary power of evaluations and motivations; and evaluating
one's own or someone else's speech. The volume will be of interest
to researchers studying online communication in such diverse fields
as linguistics, sociology, anthropology, programming, and media
studies.
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