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Urban Voices: The Sociolinguistics, Grammar and Pragmatics of Spoken Russian (eBook, ePUB)
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The volume Urban Voices presents studies, analysing how speakers of Russian convey social meanings across a variety of speech situations. Rooted in quantitative and qualitative methodological frameworks, the contributions show how various linguistic, paralinguistic and pragmatic means relate to sociolinguistic dimensions (e.g. display the social, ethnic, local identity of a speaker, the institutional character of a communicative situation). The analyses are the results of the research network Urban Voices, which focuses on the sociolinguistics, grammar and pragmatics of spoken Russian and…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
The volume Urban Voices presents studies, analysing how speakers of Russian convey social meanings across a variety of speech situations. Rooted in quantitative and qualitative methodological frameworks, the contributions show how various linguistic, paralinguistic and pragmatic means relate to sociolinguistic dimensions (e.g. display the social, ethnic, local identity of a speaker, the institutional character of a communicative situation). The analyses are the results of the research network Urban Voices, which focuses on the sociolinguistics, grammar and pragmatics of spoken Russian and investigates its linguistic and communicative diversity. The contributors are Olga Blinova, Nina Bodganova-Beglarian, Beatrix Kreß, Lenore Grenoble, Peter Kosta, Elena Markasova, Ludger Paschen, Nicole Richter, Christian Sappok, Tatiana Sherstinova and Nadine Thielemann.


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Autorenporträt
Nadine Thielemann is a professor of Slavic linguistics at Vienna University of Economics and Business. She is interested in the linguistics and pragmatics of talk-in-interaction, political discourse and multilingualism at the workplace. Nicole Richter is a professor of Multicultural Communication (Slavonic and English Linguistics) at the European University Viadrina, Frankfurt (Oder) and at Collegium Polonicum, mainly interested in contrastive phonetics and prosody.