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E-raamat: Texture of Discourse: Towards an outline of connectivity theory

(University of Tilburg)
  • Formaat: 225 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Sep-2009
  • Kirjastus: John Benjamins Publishing Co
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789027289087
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  • Formaat: 225 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Sep-2009
  • Kirjastus: John Benjamins Publishing Co
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789027289087
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The aim of this monograph is to give impetus to research into one of the central questions in discourse studies: what makes a sequence of sentences or utterances a discourse?
The theoretical framework for describing the possibilities of discourse continuation is delineated by two principles: the discursive and the dialogic principle. The ‘chord’ of discourse is unfolded in a tripartite ‘wire’: Conjunction, Adjunction and Interjunction, each containing three aspects, leading to a Connectivity Model. This new three-by-three taxonomy of discourse relations incorporates findings from several theories and approaches that have evolved over the last three decades, including Systemic Functional Linguistics and Rhetorical Structure Theory. In comparing this model to other models, this book presents a state-of-the-art of discourse relation analysis combined with detailed accounts of many examples. This monograph furthermore proposes a new way of presenting discourse structures—in ‘connectivity graphs’—followed by eleven commandments for the segmentation and labeling of discourse, and three procedures for disambiguation if more labels are applicable. This study can provide a base for corpus linguistic analysis on discourse structures, computational approaches to discourse generation and cognitive experimental research of discourse competence.
Preface ix
Introduction
1(8)
The landscape of discourse studies
1(1)
Challenges for a connectivity theory
2(4)
About this study
6(3)
Discourse as discursive and dialogic
9(12)
Discourse, texture and connectivity
9(2)
First explorations
11(1)
The discursive principle
12(2)
The dialogic principle
14(3)
The principles as a framework
17(4)
Conjunction
21(20)
Discourse basics
21(3)
Location
24(1)
Ordination
25(3)
Combination
28(6)
Schema and application
34(7)
Adjunction
41(12)
On adding information
41(3)
Elaboration
44(2)
Extension
46(1)
Enhancement
47(3)
Schema and application
50(3)
Interjunction
53(10)
From addresser to addressee
53(1)
Expressing relations
54(1)
Processing relations
55(2)
Impressing relations
57(2)
Schema and application
59(4)
The Connectivity Model
63(24)
A new taxonomy of discourse relations
63(4)
Adjunction relations, an overview
67(12)
Interjunction relations, an overview
79(8)
The architecture of the model
87(16)
Notes on terminology
87(5)
The Conjunction as a base
92(3)
The levels of Adjunction and Interjunction
95(4)
Positioning discourse relations
99(4)
This model and other models
103(20)
Cohesion structures
103(3)
On defining discourse relations
106(4)
The domain of connectivity
110(4)
Comparing taxonomies
114(4)
Controlled increasability
118(5)
The representation of discourse
123(20)
The unit of analysis
123(6)
Discourse trees
129(3)
Comments on trees
132(4)
Connectivity graphs
136(4)
An example of a connectivity graph
140(3)
The interpretation of discourse relations
143(20)
The coding procedure
143(7)
On the ambiguity of discourse relations
150(2)
Approaches to disambiguation of discourse relations
152(3)
Three strategies for disambiguation
155(2)
Examples of disambiguation
157(6)
Starting the analysis
163(16)
Choosing a heuristic approach
163(3)
Detecting form - function correspondences
166(3)
The challenge of Conjunction analysis
169(5)
Using other analyses
174(5)
Some research examples
179(20)
Signposts in discourse
180(6)
On discourse competence
186(7)
Discourse relations in the communication process
193(6)
References 199(8)
Author index 207(2)
Subject index 209