Handbook of Language and Social Interaction

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Kristine L. Fitch, Robert E. Sanders
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2005 - 505 pagini
This Handbook of Language and Social Interaction stands as the premier scholarly resource for LSI subject matter and research, giving visibility and definition to this area of study and establishing a benchmark for the current state of scholarship. The Handbook identifies the five main subdisciplinary areas that make up LSI--language pragmatics, conversation analysis, language and social psychology, discourse analysis, and the ethnography of communication. One section of the volume is devoted to each area, providing a forum for a variety of authoritative voices to provide their respective views on the central concerns, research programs, and main findings of each area, and to articulate the present or emergent issues and directions. A sixth section addresses LSI in the context of broadcast media and the Internet. This volume's distinguished authors and original content contribute significantly to the advancement of LSI scholarship, circumscribing and clarifying the interrelationships among the questions, findings, and methods across LSI's subdisciplinary areas. Readers will come away richer in their understanding of the variety and depth of ways the intricacies of language and social interaction are revealed. As an essential scholarly resource, this Handbook is required reading for scholars, researchers, and graduate students in language and social interaction, and it is destined to have a broad influence on future LSI study and research.

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Despre autor (2005)

Kristine Fitch received her Ph.D. from the University of Washington and is an associate professor of communication at the University of Iowa. Her research and theory are centered in the ethnography of speaking based on fieldwork in Colombia, England, Spain, Finland, and Texas. Dr. Fitch current work centers around persuasion and personal relationships in cultural context, particularly in moments of poaching and improvisation at the intersections of public. She is widely published throughout the communication discipline.
Robert E. Sanders is a professor in the Department of Communication at the State University of New York at Albany. His teaching specialties are in the topic areas of persuasion, interpersonal communication, and cultural influences on communication. He is the author of the 1987 book Cognitive Foundations of Calculated Speech. In addition, Dr. Sanders has also brought out eight volumes of the journal, Research on Language and Social Interaction since becoming editor in 1988.



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