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Speech Act Taxonomy as a Tool for Ethnographic Description
An analysis based on videotapes of continuous behavior in two New York households
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Table of contents:- List of Tables- Acknowledgments- 1. Introduction- 1.1. The background of the research- 1.2. An etic approach to speech acts- 1.3. The goals and strategy of the study- 2. The Ethnography of Speaking and the Ethnography of Doing- 2.1. What emic definitions of speech acts can't do- 2.2. The limits of emically defined speech events and situations- 2.3. Speech acts and communicative intentions- 2.4. The taxonomy of speech acts- 3. Classifying Speech Acts- 3.1. Intended effects- 3.2. Communicative intentions before language- 3.3. Comprehending speech acts in context- 3.4. Languag...
Table of contents:
- List of Tables
- Acknowledgments
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1. The background of the research
- 1.2. An etic approach to speech acts
- 1.3. The goals and strategy of the study
- 2. The Ethnography of Speaking and the Ethnography of Doing
- 2.1. What emic definitions of speech acts can't do
- 2.2. The limits of emically defined speech events and situations
- 2.3. Speech acts and communicative intentions
- 2.4. The taxonomy of speech acts
- 3. Classifying Speech Acts
- 3.1. Intended effects
- 3.2. Communicative intentions before language
- 3.3. Comprehending speech acts in context
- 3.4. Language devices expressing illocutionary acts
- 4. The Structure of Speech Acts
- 4.1. Address
- 4.2. Motivators
- 4.3. The analysis of modality & modulation
- 4.4. Procedures
- 5. Behavioral Counts of Speech Acts
- 5.1. Defining measures based on the taxonomy of speech acts
- 5.2. Coding Directive and Commissive measures
- 5.3. The other speech act measures
- 5.4. Conclusions
- Footnotes
- References
- Appendix A: Transcript of conversation in one household 5:05 P.M. to 5:19 P.M.
- Appendix B: Speaking about the day's events
- List of Tables
- Acknowledgments
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1. The background of the research
- 1.2. An etic approach to speech acts
- 1.3. The goals and strategy of the study
- 2. The Ethnography of Speaking and the Ethnography of Doing
- 2.1. What emic definitions of speech acts can't do
- 2.2. The limits of emically defined speech events and situations
- 2.3. Speech acts and communicative intentions
- 2.4. The taxonomy of speech acts
- 3. Classifying Speech Acts
- 3.1. Intended effects
- 3.2. Communicative intentions before language
- 3.3. Comprehending speech acts in context
- 3.4. Language devices expressing illocutionary acts
- 4. The Structure of Speech Acts
- 4.1. Address
- 4.2. Motivators
- 4.3. The analysis of modality & modulation
- 4.4. Procedures
- 5. Behavioral Counts of Speech Acts
- 5.1. Defining measures based on the taxonomy of speech acts
- 5.2. Coding Directive and Commissive measures
- 5.3. The other speech act measures
- 5.4. Conclusions
- Footnotes
- References
- Appendix A: Transcript of conversation in one household 5:05 P.M. to 5:19 P.M.
- Appendix B: Speaking about the day's events