Discourse Analysis: May 2012 Carina Jahani Carina - Jahani@lingfil - Uu.se
Discourse Analysis: May 2012 Carina Jahani Carina - Jahani@lingfil - Uu.se
May 2012
Carina Jahani
[email protected]
Course structure
• 7 lectures with some exercies
• Examination:
– written paper
– oral presentation
– written exam
Basic concepts
• What is discourse analysis?
“Discourse analysis is, one may say, a fuzzy discipline,
perhaps more oriented toward chaos theory than toward
the kinds of paradigms applied linguists are more
accustomed to using. The obvious reason for the
fuzziness lies in the hugenumber of variable implicated in
the process of text generation and text recognition…
Discourse analysts will need to struggle along with careful
descriptive approaches, dealing with as many of the
variables as possible, but recognizing that any presently
conceived model will necessarily be incomplete.” (Kaplan
and Grabe 2002: 216)
Cognitive models
Have a psychological rather than a linguistic basis, a
concern with the cognitive processes underlying text
production and text comprehension. Text is seen as
an integral part of human social and psychological
activities. Texts are the products of problem-solving
activities.
Critical Discourse Analysis
• Agent orientation
events which are controlled by an agent
Four common types of monologue
(written or oral)
Agent orientation
+ -
Temporal + NARRATIVE PROCEDURAL
succession - BEHAVIOURAL EXPOSITORY
FOCUS IN THIS COURSE
• NARRATIVE MONOLOGUE
• oral storytelling
• written fiction
• “life stories”
• etc. etc.
(But note that dialogue can be, and is often
embedded in a story)
oral – written production:
important differences
• Frequency of repetition
(e.g. speech orienters, tail – head linkage, evidential
markers)
• Deviations from standard word order
• Text organization
• Hedges (you know, well, sort of)
• Vocabulary
• Paralinguistic signals (mimicry, voice, intonation
versus punctuation)
Coherence
a coherent text can be structured into ONE single
overall mental representation
Mental representation:
the text (internal contextualization)
prior knowledge and expectations (heavily based on
culture and other pre-conditions)
(external contextualization)
coherence must be judged after reading/hearing
the whole text
Cohesion
the use of linguistic means to signal coherence
Common types of cohesion:
1. Identity (Identical forms)
repetition
lexical replacement
pronouns and other pro-forms
substitution
ellipsis
Cohesion
2. Lexical relations
hyponymy
part-whole
collocation
Cohesion
3. Morphosyntactic patterns
consistency of inflectional categories
echoing utterances
discourse pragmatic structuring