Cross-Cultural Pragmatics
Über dieses Buch
This book, which can be seen as both a research monograph and a text book, challenges the approaches to human interaction based on supposedly universal "maxims of conversation" and "principles of politeness", which fly in the face of reality as experienced by millions of people - refugees, immigrants, crosscultural families, and so on. By contrast to such approaches, which can be of no use in crosscultural communication and education, this book is both theoretical and practical: it shows that in different societies, norms of human interaction are different and reflect different cultural attitudes and values; and it offers a framework within which different cultural norms and different ways of speaking can be effectively explored, explained, and taught.
The book discusses data from a wide range of languages, including English, Italian, Russian, Polish, Yiddish, Hebrew, Japanese, Korean, and Walmatjari (an Australian Aboriginal language), and it shows that the meanings expressed in human interaction and the different "cultural scripts" prevailing in different speech communities can be described and compared in a way that is clear, simple, rigorous, and free of ethnocentric bias by using a "natural semantic metalanguage", based on empirically established universal human concepts. As the book shows, this metalanguage can be used as a basis for teaching successful cross-cultural communication and education, including the teaching of languages in a cultural context.
Information zu Autoren / Herausgebern
Anna Wierzbicka is Professor at Australian National University, Canberra.
Rezensionen
"The book can be regarded as a recapitulation of results obtained in all former scholarly projects carried by its author. [It] is one if the best manuals of widely understood pragmatics and ethnolinguistics of human speech, the more so as the traditoinal grammars and handbooks of linguistics usually leave the ethnography of speech in the background of linguistics analyses."
Tomasz Wicherkiewicz in: Linguistics and Oriental Studies from Poznan
Fachgebiete
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Frontmatter
I -
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Contents
XXXI -
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Chapter 1. Introduction: semantics and praglllatics
1 -
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Chapter 2. Different cultures, different languages, different speech acts
25 -
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Chapter 3. Cross-cultural pragmatics and different cultural values
67 -
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Chapter 4. Describing conversational routines
131 -
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Chapter 5. Speech acts and speech genres across languages and cultures
149 -
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Chapter 6. The semantics of illocutionary forces
197 -
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Chapter 7. Italian reduplication: its meaning and its cultural significance
255 -
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Chapter 8. Interjections across cultures
285 -
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Chapter 9. Particles and illocutionary meanings
341 -
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Chapter 10. Boys will be boys: even 'truisllls' are culture-specific
391 -
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Chapter 11. Conclusion: selDantics as a key to cross-cultural pragmatics
453 -
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Backmatter
457