Doing Discourse Analysis: Methods for Studying Action in Talk and TextSAGE, 11 mai 2000 - 240 pages Providing both the practical steps for doing discourse analysis and the theoretical justifications for those steps, this book shows students how the social world revolves around talk and text. The authors draw on conversation analysis, critical discourse analysis, pragmatics, and the discursive approach developed in social psychology. The book presents actual examples, covers data collection methods and strategies for data analysis, and addresses issues of reliability and validity. |
Table des matières
Chapter 1 Language Discourse and Discourse Analysis | 3 |
Chapter 2 Varieties of Discourse Analysis | 18 |
Chapter 3 Examples of Discourse Analysis | 34 |
Part II Method | 53 |
Chapter 4 Discourse and Data | 55 |
Chapter 5 Data Collection | 69 |
Chapter 6 Preparation for Analysis | 82 |
Part III Analysis | 89 |
Part IV Evaluation and Reporting | 161 |
Chapter 10 Warranting in Discourse Analysis | 163 |
Chapter 11 Writing the Report | 179 |
Chapter 12 Postscript | 187 |
Transcript Notation | 193 |
Selected Varieties of Discourse Analysis | 195 |
Terms for Discourse Analysis | 213 |
References | 217 |
Strategies of Interpretation | 91 |
Patterns and Context | 117 |
Research Examples | 143 |
231 | |
About the Authors | 240 |
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action activities analytic induction Antaki and Wetherell approach argued argument Carjuzáa Chapter child sexual abuse claims cognitive concepts concerns consider construction context contrast conventional conversation conversation analysis Coupland criteria critical Critical discourse analysis DASP deixis devices discourse analysis discourse e.g. discourse-analytic discursive psychology discussion Edwards emphasis ethnomethodology example Excerpt Fairclough Fanshel focus functions gender Harré Hutchby & Wooffitt identify identity implicature important interaction interpretive repertoires intertextual analysis interviews involves issues Kroger language linguistic meaning metaphor metatheoretical methods multiple nonverbal notion orientation participants particular patterns person possible poststructuralism Potter & Wetherell Potter and Wetherell practices pragmatics problem problematic qualitative qualitative research question rape refer relevant requires response sample Schegloff sense sexual simply social psychology sort speaker specific speech acts strategies structure suggest talk tease theory tion topic Tracy transcription utterance variability variety verbal versions warranting Widdicombe