Chapter 2. Conversational irony: Evaluating complaints
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Maria Christodoulidou
Abstract
This chapter is concerned with ironic assessments in spontaneous Cypriot-Greek conversations. The phenomenon is studied here by a close examination of ironic assessments in the specific context of naturally occurring complaint sequences where the speaker is complaining about a non-present party’s misbehaviour or reported words. The main focus is on the sequential and interactional role of the placement of ironic utterances in a structural place of the organisation of storytelling that is upon the culmination of a complaint, where usually an evaluation is expected from the recipient. Ironic evaluations are investigated by exploring the whole construction of the complaint and the relationships established among the participants up to the slot which is filled with the ironic element. This is why I draw from selected conversational fragments to show that in the data there is a pattern which is revealed by combining irony with an expression of evaluation. This type of evaluation is very effective in producing a stronger claim than the one reported and proffered with the punchline. This moves the topic to closure. Examples of ironic evaluations are effectively expressed through non-literal means, such as extreme case formulations, impossible descriptions, self-contradictory assessments, and rhetorical questions.
Abstract
This chapter is concerned with ironic assessments in spontaneous Cypriot-Greek conversations. The phenomenon is studied here by a close examination of ironic assessments in the specific context of naturally occurring complaint sequences where the speaker is complaining about a non-present party’s misbehaviour or reported words. The main focus is on the sequential and interactional role of the placement of ironic utterances in a structural place of the organisation of storytelling that is upon the culmination of a complaint, where usually an evaluation is expected from the recipient. Ironic evaluations are investigated by exploring the whole construction of the complaint and the relationships established among the participants up to the slot which is filled with the ironic element. This is why I draw from selected conversational fragments to show that in the data there is a pattern which is revealed by combining irony with an expression of evaluation. This type of evaluation is very effective in producing a stronger claim than the one reported and proffered with the punchline. This moves the topic to closure. Examples of ironic evaluations are effectively expressed through non-literal means, such as extreme case formulations, impossible descriptions, self-contradictory assessments, and rhetorical questions.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1. Strategies in daily conversations
- Chapter 1. Strategy and creativity in dialogue 11
- Chapter 2. Conversational irony: Evaluating complaints 25
- Chapter 3. Speaking through other voices 43
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Part 2. Plural identities and viewpoints in acquisition and language learning
- Chapter 4. The self as other: Self words and pronominal reversals in language acquisition 57
- Chapter 5. The function of formulations in polyphonic dialogues 73
- Chapter 6. Observing the paradox: Interrogative-negative questions as cues for a monophonic promotion of polyphony in educational practices 87
- Chapter 7. Co-construction of identity in the Spanish heritage language classroom 101
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Part 3. The play of voices in mass media and politics
- Chapter 8. Polyphonic strategies used in polemical dialogue 117
- Chapter 9. Metacommunication and intertextuality in British and Russian parliamentary answers 129
- Chapter 10. The role of prosody in a Czech talk-show 143
- Chapter 11. Intertextuality as a means of positioning in a talk-show 161
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Part 4. Social and cultural polyphony and intertextuality
- Chapter 12. Rumour in the present Romanian press: Aspects of knowledge sources and their linguistic markers 175
- Chapter 13. Peritextual dialogue in the dynamics of poetry translatability 189
- Chapter 14. Voices through time in Meso-American textiles 205
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Part 5. Dialogism in literary discourse
- Chapter 15. “Finn Mac Cool in his mind was wrestling with his people”: Polyphonic dialogues in Flann O’Brien’s comic writing 225
- Chapter 16. Dialogization, ontology, metadiscourse 237
- Chapter 17. Ironic palimpsests in the Romanian poetry of the nineties 251
- Chapter 18. Polyphony in interior monologues 265
- General references 279
- Index 297
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1. Strategies in daily conversations
- Chapter 1. Strategy and creativity in dialogue 11
- Chapter 2. Conversational irony: Evaluating complaints 25
- Chapter 3. Speaking through other voices 43
-
Part 2. Plural identities and viewpoints in acquisition and language learning
- Chapter 4. The self as other: Self words and pronominal reversals in language acquisition 57
- Chapter 5. The function of formulations in polyphonic dialogues 73
- Chapter 6. Observing the paradox: Interrogative-negative questions as cues for a monophonic promotion of polyphony in educational practices 87
- Chapter 7. Co-construction of identity in the Spanish heritage language classroom 101
-
Part 3. The play of voices in mass media and politics
- Chapter 8. Polyphonic strategies used in polemical dialogue 117
- Chapter 9. Metacommunication and intertextuality in British and Russian parliamentary answers 129
- Chapter 10. The role of prosody in a Czech talk-show 143
- Chapter 11. Intertextuality as a means of positioning in a talk-show 161
-
Part 4. Social and cultural polyphony and intertextuality
- Chapter 12. Rumour in the present Romanian press: Aspects of knowledge sources and their linguistic markers 175
- Chapter 13. Peritextual dialogue in the dynamics of poetry translatability 189
- Chapter 14. Voices through time in Meso-American textiles 205
-
Part 5. Dialogism in literary discourse
- Chapter 15. “Finn Mac Cool in his mind was wrestling with his people”: Polyphonic dialogues in Flann O’Brien’s comic writing 225
- Chapter 16. Dialogization, ontology, metadiscourse 237
- Chapter 17. Ironic palimpsests in the Romanian poetry of the nineties 251
- Chapter 18. Polyphony in interior monologues 265
- General references 279
- Index 297