13.431, Books: Discourse Analysis
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LINGUIST List: Vol-13-431. Sun Feb 17 2002. ISSN: 1068-4875.
Subject: 13.431, Books: Discourse Analysis
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1)
Date: Wed, 13 Feb 2002 10:38:28 -0500
From: "Coleman, Sarah" <scoleman at blackwellpub.com>
Subject: Discourse Analysis
-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------
Date: Wed, 13 Feb 2002 10:38:28 -0500
From: "Coleman, Sarah" <scoleman at blackwellpub.com>
Subject: Discourse Analysis
NEW TITLE FROM BLACKWELL PUBLISHING
The Handbook of Discourse Analysis
Edited by Deborah Schiffrin, Deborah Tannen, and Heidi E. Hamilton
All Georgetown University
The articles collected in the Handbook of Discourse Analysis comprise
a foundational paradigm for discourse that is broad enough to support
a variety of approaches, methods, and even definitions, regarding
discourse. The volume begins with an overview of discourse analysis,
then moves through an examination of theoretical and methodological
issues in the field. The book also presents a wide range of empirical
studies of discourse as social and linguistic practice. Since many of
the articles are interdisciplinary, the book concludes with an
exploration of how different disciplines have become interested in
discourse.
The Handbook of Discourse Analysis makes significant contributions to
current research and serves as a comprehensive and authoritative guide
to the central issues in contemporary discourse analysis.
Contents:
Introduction: Deborah Schiffrin, Deborah Tannen and Heidi Hamilton (all
Georgetown University).
Part I: Discourse Analysis and Linguistics:
1. Intonation and Discourse: Current Views from Within: Elizabeth
Couper-Kuhlen (University of Konstanz).
2. Cohesion and Texture: Jim Martin (University of Sydney).
3. Discourse Markers: Language, Meaning and Context: Deborah Schiffrin
(Georgetown University).
4. Discourse and Semantics: Neal Norrick (Saarland University).
5. Discourse and Relevance Theory: Diane Blakemore (Southampton University).
6. Discourse and Information Structure: Gregory Ward and Betty Birner
(Northwestern University).
7. Historical Discourse Analysis: Laurel Brinton (University of British
Columbia).
8. Typology and Discourse: John Myhill (University of Haifa).
9. Register Variation: A Corpus Approach: Douglas Biber (Northern Arizona
University) and Susan Conrad.
Part II: The Linking of Theory and Practice in Discourse Analysis:
10. Nine Ways of Looking at Apologies: The Necessity of Interdisciplinary
Theory and Method in Discourse Analysis: Robin Lakoff (University of
California, Berkeley).
11. Interactional Sociolinguistics: A Personal Perspective: John Gumperz
(University of California, Berkeley).
12. Discourse as an Interactional Achievement III: The Omnirelevance of
Action: Emanuel Schegloff (University of California, Los Angeles).
13. Discourse and Interaction: Monica Heller (University of Toronto).
14. The Linguistic Structure of Discourse: Livia Polanyi (FX Palo Alto Lab).
15. The Variationist Approach Towards Discourse Structural Effects and
Socio-Interactional Dynamics: Sylvie DuBois (Louisiana State University) and
David Sankoff (Université de Montréal).
16. Computer-Assisted Text and Corpus Analysis: Lexical Cohesion and
Communicative Competence: Michael Stubbs (University of Trier).
17. The Transcription of Discourse: Jane Edwards (University of California,
Berkeley).
Part III: Discourse: Language, Context, and Interaction:
Political, Social, and Institutional Domains:
18. Critical Discourse Analysis: Teun van Dijk (University of Amsterdam).
19. Discourse and Racism: Ruth Wodak (Universität Wein) and Martin Reisigl.
20. Political Discourse: John Wilson (University of Ulster).
21. Discourse and the Media: Colleen Cotter (Georgetown University).
22. Discourse Analysis in the Legal Context: Roger Shuy (Georgetown
University).
23. The Discourse of Medical Encounters: Nancy Ainsworth-Vaughn (Michigan
State University).
24. Language and Medicine: Suzanne Fleischman (University of California,
Berkeley).
25. Discourse in Educational Settings: Carolyn Adger (Temple University).
26. Institutional Narratives: Charlotte Linde (Institute for Research on
Learning).
Culture, Community, and Genre:
27. Discourse and Intercultural Communication: Ronald and Suzanne Scollon
(Georgetown University).
28. Discourse and Gender: Shari Kendall and Deborah Tannen (Georgetown
University).
29. Discourse and Aging: Heidi Hamilton (Georgetown University).
30. Child discourse: Jenny Cook-Gumperz (University of California, Santa
Barbara) and Amy Kryatzis (University of California, Santa Barbara).
31. Computer-Mediated Discourse: Susan Herring (University of Texas).
32. Discourse and Narrative: Barbara Johnstone (Carnegie Mellon University).
33. Discourse and Conflict: Christina Kakavá (Mary Washington College).
Part IV: Discourse Across Disciplines:
34. The Analysis of Discourse Flow: Wallace Chafe (University of California,
Santa Barbara).
35. The Discursive Turn in Social Psychology: Rom Harré (Linacre College,
Oxford and Georgetown University).
36. Discourse and Language Teaching: Elite Olshtain (Hebrew University) and
Marianne Celce-Murcia (University of California, Los Angeles).
37. Discourse Analysis in Communication: Karen Tracy (University of
Colorado).
38. Discourse and Sociology: Sociology and Discourse: Allen Grimshaw
(Indiana University).
39. Imagination in Discourse: Herb Clark and Mija VanDerWege (both Stanford
University).
40. Literary Pragmatics: Jacob Mey (Odense University).
41. Computational Perspectives on Discourse and Dialogue: Bonnie Webber
(University of Pennsylvania).
Index.
HB: 0-631-20595-0 $124.95/£85
872 pp / August 2001
Books:
To save 30% on this book, with free shipping and handling, sign up
for Blackwell's Linguist List Plus at http://www.linguistlistplus.com/
or order at full price from our website
http://www.blackwellpub.com/asp/linguist.asp
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