Morality in Discourse: Oxford Studies in Sociolinguistics
Editat de Michael Haugh, Rosina Márquez-Reiteren Limba Engleză Paperback – 12 ian 2025
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197618073
ISBN-10: 0197618073
Pagini: 312
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Oxford Studies in Sociolinguistics
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197618073
Pagini: 312
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Oxford Studies in Sociolinguistics
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Centering on the discursive construction and interactional negotiation of morality in a variety of social contexts and practices, this edited collection fills a significant gap in sociolinguistics and discursive approaches to this social issue. With this important and timely volume, Michael Haugh and Rosina Márquez Reiter provide an arena for cross-pollination among different approaches in the field of discourse studies and open the way for further investigations of morality in discourse. A foundational read for sociolinguists and discourse analysis interested in the discursive enactment of normativities.
While morality has been considered as a foundation of the social world in philosophy and sociology since their very beginnings, it is only more recently that an orientation to moral issues has widely become to be recognized as being intrinsic to social interaction. Using the methodological tools of various strands of pragmatics, the contributions to this volume show how moral stances and evaluations are ascribed, negotiated and presupposed in often very subtle and hidden ways in social interaction. Both the ubiquity and the contextual sensitivity of moral concerns of everyday conduct are marvellously articulated in detailed studies of a stunning variety of social fields. The volume is a must-read for everybody interested in the foundations of the interactional order.
Yes, the topic of morality is not new in academia, having been discussed in anthropology, sociology, psychology and more. Yes, there have been some studies looking at morality and language / discourse. But, no, nobody - until now - has drawn the language threads together, creating a tapestry of scholarly riches. This volume encompasses speech acts, communicative environments, participants and more, across a particularly broad range of areas - from domestic abuse through politics to social media. It insightfully, subtlety and critically examines their engagement with morality, and in the process sets a research agenda for the future.
Morality in Discourse is a welcome addition to the growing "moral turn" across the social sciences and humanities. As the editors, Michael Haugh and Rosina Marquez Reiter, point out, if we take seriously the idea that morality saturates everyday experience, then it is crucial that we give close, scrupulous attention to the ebb and flow of language use in ordinary interactions. This volume does an excellent job of showing how it's done and what the payoff can be.
In the past decade the study of morality has been systematically rethought by researchers who have focused on the way moral concerns are embedded in a range of intricate ways in unfolding talk. Morality in this arena is bound up with knowledge, asymmetry and issues of affiliation and interactional alignment. Haugh and Marquez Reiter's collection is an important and welcome addition to this literature, developing some of its fundamental themes in a range of different settings, cultures and modalities (as varied as romantic partner talk, political disagreement, Indian hip hop). This is essential reading for anyone concerned with the current state of the art in this field.
Accountability and responsibility have been part of discourse-analytical awareness for quite a while. Morality in Discourse provides them with a solid theoretical home, the much-needed step to build upon.
While morality has been considered as a foundation of the social world in philosophy and sociology since their very beginnings, it is only more recently that an orientation to moral issues has widely become to be recognized as being intrinsic to social interaction. Using the methodological tools of various strands of pragmatics, the contributions to this volume show how moral stances and evaluations are ascribed, negotiated and presupposed in often very subtle and hidden ways in social interaction. Both the ubiquity and the contextual sensitivity of moral concerns of everyday conduct are marvellously articulated in detailed studies of a stunning variety of social fields. The volume is a must-read for everybody interested in the foundations of the interactional order.
Yes, the topic of morality is not new in academia, having been discussed in anthropology, sociology, psychology and more. Yes, there have been some studies looking at morality and language / discourse. But, no, nobody - until now - has drawn the language threads together, creating a tapestry of scholarly riches. This volume encompasses speech acts, communicative environments, participants and more, across a particularly broad range of areas - from domestic abuse through politics to social media. It insightfully, subtlety and critically examines their engagement with morality, and in the process sets a research agenda for the future.
Morality in Discourse is a welcome addition to the growing "moral turn" across the social sciences and humanities. As the editors, Michael Haugh and Rosina Marquez Reiter, point out, if we take seriously the idea that morality saturates everyday experience, then it is crucial that we give close, scrupulous attention to the ebb and flow of language use in ordinary interactions. This volume does an excellent job of showing how it's done and what the payoff can be.
In the past decade the study of morality has been systematically rethought by researchers who have focused on the way moral concerns are embedded in a range of intricate ways in unfolding talk. Morality in this arena is bound up with knowledge, asymmetry and issues of affiliation and interactional alignment. Haugh and Marquez Reiter's collection is an important and welcome addition to this literature, developing some of its fundamental themes in a range of different settings, cultures and modalities (as varied as romantic partner talk, political disagreement, Indian hip hop). This is essential reading for anyone concerned with the current state of the art in this field.
Accountability and responsibility have been part of discourse-analytical awareness for quite a while. Morality in Discourse provides them with a solid theoretical home, the much-needed step to build upon.
Notă biografică
Michael Haugh is Professor of Linguistics and Applied Linguistics in the School of Languages and Cultures at the University of Queensland, Australia. His research interests lie primarily in the field of pragmatics, with a particular focus on the role of language in social interaction. He has published more than 120 books and articles, including the Sociopragmatics of Japanese (2023, Routledge; with Y. Obana) and Action Ascription in Interaction (ed. 2022, Cambridge University Press; with A. Deppermann). He is a former co-editor in chief of the Journal of Pragmatics (2015-2020), and is currently co-editor in chief of Cambridge Elements in Pragmatics.Rosina Márquez-Reiter is Professor of Pragmatics and Interaction in the School of Languages and Applied Linguistics at The Open University, UK. Her research interests focus on how language is used in social interactions. She has published on indirectness, (im)politeness, pragmatic variation, face-to-face andtechnology-mediated service encounters, multimodality and immobility, and publications include The Pragmatics of Sensitive Activities in Institutional Discourse (co-ed. 2018, Benjamins), Language Practices and Processes among Latin Americans in Europe (co-ed. 2023, Routledge) and Leveraging Relations in Diaspora (in press, Cambridge University Press). She is Associate Editor of Pragmatics, founding editor and Editor-in-Chief (2005-2011) of Spanish in Context.