27.749, Calls: Discourse Analysis; Pragmatics; Sociolinguistics/ Travaux interdiscplinaires sur la parole et le langage (Jrnl)

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LINGUIST List: Vol-27-749. Tue Feb 09 2016. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 27.749, Calls: Discourse Analysis; Pragmatics; Sociolinguistics/ Travaux interdiscplinaires sur la parole et le langage (Jrnl)

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Date: Tue, 09 Feb 2016 10:40:25
From: Tsuyoshi KIDA [kida.tsuyoshi.ga at u.tsukuba.ac.jp]
Subject: Discourse Analysis; Pragmatics; Sociolinguistics/ Travaux interdiscplinaires sur la parole et le langage (Jrnl)

 
Full Title: Travaux interdiscplinaires sur la parole et le langage 


Linguistic Field(s): Discourse Analysis; Pragmatics; Sociolinguistics 

Call Deadline: 30-Jun-2016 

''Conflict in discourse and discourse in conflict''

http://tipa.revues.org/1524

In the public or private sphere, conflict is triggered through the process of
discourse being produced, disseminated, interpreted and amplified -therefore
having an effect the opinions and attitudes of its receivers. At the same
time, human beings are inherently endowed with the ability to manage and
overcome these conflicts through lexical choice, ways of speaking, non-verbal
communication, deconfliction techniques and conflict resolution methods. In
other words, conflict is mediated through discourse.

The thematic concept for volume 32 of TIPA -conceived following collaboration
between a linguist and an expert in political discourse - proposes to focus on
the relations between discourse and conflict, within various disciplinary
frameworks, in order to address the following questions: What type of
discourse engenders conflict? What are the features specific to conflictual
discourse in terms of prosody, semantics, pragmatics, discursive or
interactional structure? How can conflict be dealt with and resolved? How can
identities and images be constructed or deconstructed through speech acts? How
can lexical choice influence the success or failure of strategic narratives in
an official speech?

These are just some of the questions to which linguistics and language
sciences, as well as other neighbouring disciplines, can be sensitive and to
which the scientific community may propose comprehensive answers by engaging
in interdisciplinary research.




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