Politeness in computer-mediated discourse of a virtual team
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Erika Darics
Abstract
Drawing on the newest findings of politeness research, this paper proposes an interactionally grounded approach to computer-mediated discourse (CMD). Through the analysis of naturally occurring text-based synchronous interactions of a virtual team the paper illustrates that the interactional politeness approach can account for linguistic phenomena not yet fully explored in computer-mediated discourse analysis. Strategies used for compensating for the lack of audio-visual information in computer-mediated communication, strategies to compensate for the technological constraints of the medium, and strategies to aid interaction management are examined from an interactional politeness viewpoint and compared to the previous findings of CMD analysis. The conclusion of this preliminary research suggests that the endeavour to communicate along the lines of politeness norms in a work-based virtual environment contradicts some of the previous findings of CMD research (unconventional orthography, capitalization, economizing), and that other areas (such as emoticons, backchannel signals and turn-taking strategies) need to be revisited and re-examined from an interactional perspective to fully understand how language functions in this merely text-based environment.
© 2010 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/New York
Articles in the same Issue
- Introduction: Politeness and impoliteness in computer-mediated communication
- When is an email really offensive?: Argumentativity and variability in evaluations of impoliteness
- Impoliteness in Japanese BBS interactions: Observations from message exchanges in two online communities
- “You Have No Idea What You are Talking About!” From e-disagreement to e-impoliteness in two online fora
- Virtual community and politeness: The use of female markers of identity and solidarity in a transvestites' website
- Identity and impoliteness in computer-mediated reader responses
- Politeness in computer-mediated discourse of a virtual team
- Book reviews
Articles in the same Issue
- Introduction: Politeness and impoliteness in computer-mediated communication
- When is an email really offensive?: Argumentativity and variability in evaluations of impoliteness
- Impoliteness in Japanese BBS interactions: Observations from message exchanges in two online communities
- “You Have No Idea What You are Talking About!” From e-disagreement to e-impoliteness in two online fora
- Virtual community and politeness: The use of female markers of identity and solidarity in a transvestites' website
- Identity and impoliteness in computer-mediated reader responses
- Politeness in computer-mediated discourse of a virtual team
- Book reviews