目录
Acknowledgments
1 Introduction
1.1 A rough definition of discourse studies
1.2 Aim and structure of this book
1.3 The presentation of the material
Questions and assignments
Bibliographical information
PART Ⅰ General orientation
2 Communication as action
2.1 The Organon model
2.2 Speech act theory
2.3 Illocutions in discourse
2.4 The cooperative principle
2.5 Relevance theory
2.6 Politeness theory
Questions and assignments
Bibliographical information
3 Discourse in communication
3.1 The pragmatic perspective
3.2 Rules for symbolic interaction
3.3 Messages between sender and receiver
3.4 The discourse situation
3.5 The socio-semiotic approach
3.6 What makes discourse discourse?
Questions and assignments
Bibliographical information
PART Ⅱ Backpacking for a scientific journey
4 Discourse types
4.1 The variety of functions and forms
4.2 Written language and verbal interaction
4.3 Everyday and literary language
4.4 Electronic discourse
4.5 Conventionalized forms for conventionalized occadions
4.6 Multimodality
Questions and assignments
Bibliographical information
5 Structured content
5.1 Propositions
5.2 Topics
5.3 Macrostructures
5.4 Superstructures
Questions and assignments
Bibliographical information
6 Discourse connections
6.1 Cohesion
6.2 Referential elements
6.3 Coherence
6.4 Rhetorical Structure Theory
6.5 Discourse relation research
Questions and assignments
Bibliographical information
7 Contextual phenomena
7.1 Deixis
7.2 Staging
7.3 Perspectivization
7.4 Given-new management
7.5 Presuppositions
7.6 Inferences
Questions and assignments
Bibliographical information
8 Style
8.1 Form, content and situation
8.2 Views on style
8.3 Stylistic analysis
8.4 Examples of stylistic research
Questions and assignments
Bibliographical information
PART Ⅲ Special modes of communication
9 Conversation analysis
10 Informative discourse
11 Narratives
12 Argumentation and persuasion
PART IV Special interests
13 Discourse and cognition
14 Discourse and institution
15 Discourse and culture
Key to the questions
References
Index