Nonverbal communication across disciplines: 1 Culture, sensory interaction, speech, conversation
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amsterdam [u.a.]
Benjamins
2002
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXXVI, 369 S. |
ISBN: | 9027221812 1556197535 |
Internformat
MARC
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Table of contents
Preface xm
Acknowledgements xiv
Introduction xv
Chapter 1
Culture, communication, and cultural fluency 1
1.1 On defining culture 1
1.2 Culture as a communication continuum: Active and passive, interactive and
noninteractive forms 3
1.3 Inherited habits and learned habits through time and space 5
1.4 Sensible and intelligible Systems in a culture 8
1.5 The systematic analysis of a culture: The interdisciplinary model of
culturemes 10
1.6 Relationships among sensible and intelligible, somatic, extrasomatic and
environmental Systems 15
1.7 The barriers of intercultural communication: The case of Tom 17
1.8 Linguistic fluency and verbal and nonverbal cultural fluency:
Behavioral alternatives and fluency quotient 19
1.9 Verbal and nonverbal cultural fluency from within:
Acculturation, epistolary communication, literary translation 21
1.10 Ontheconcept of verbal and nonverbal usage 22
1.11 The semiotic-communicative processes of language and nonverbal Systems
in intercultural interaction 24
1.12 Conclusion 27
1.13 Topics for interdisciplinary research 28
Chapter 2
Language in the total communicative context of its interbodily
and environmental Systems 31
2.1 Intersornatic communication in its cultural and environmental context 31
2.2 The Channels of intersornatic emission and perception in interaction:
Direct and synesthesial perception of dynamic and static signs 32
2.3 Light as an external agent for our interactive perception 47
2.4 The importance of synesthesia and language among the other somatic Systems
in human and animals 48
2.5 External somatic communication 49
2.6 The cornmunicative possibilities ofbody movements 49
2.7 The concept of interactive articulations: Single and multiple 52
2.8 Coding and interrelationships of verbal and nonverbal behaviors
in interaction 53
2.9 The basic interrelationships among nonverbal Systems and language 55
2.10 Towarda revision of the concept ofredundancy 59
2.11 Conclusion 60
2.12 Topics for interdisciplinary research 61
Chapter 3
The audiovisual reality of interactive discourse: the speaking face 63
3.1 The audiovisual production of speech: Permanent, changing, dynamic and
artificial signs in the speaking face 63
3.2 Breathing and communication: Lungs and bronchi 74
3.3 The esophagus 76
3.4 The larynx 76
3.5 The pharynx 78
3.6 The alveolar-palatal areas 79
3.7 The dental areas 81
3.8 The labial areas and the cheeks 82
3.9 The tongue 89
3.10 The mandible and the chin 93
3.11 The nasal cavities 95
3.12 The vowd Sounds as degrees in tongue and lip position:
Sound and gesture 99
3.13 Conclusion 100
3.14 Topics for interdisciplinary research 100
Chapter 4
Language-paralanguage-kinesics 103
4.1 The basic triple structure of discourse: Language-paralanguage-kinesics 103
4.2 The semiotic-expressive limitations of spoken words and the verbal-nonverbal
expressionofthe ineffable 104
4.3 The written word and the feasible orality ofwriting 108
4.4 Lexicality and grammaticality of paralanguage and kinesics
and the other sensible Systems 110
4.5 New information, communicative economy, verbal deficiency, anticipation,
and formal and semantic congruence 111
4.6 The precarious reality of read discourse 113
4.7 A brief introduction to verbal language, paralanguage and kinesics 114
4.8 On intonation as communication 117
4.9 Segmentable and nonsegmentable elements in the triple structure 118
4.10 The ten realizations and mutual combinations of language,
paralanguage and kinesics 119
4.11 Ontogenetic and social development, spatial and temporal transmission,
and balance and pathology in the triple structure 121
4.12 The total conditioning background of the triple structure
and of communication in general 123
4.13 Conclusion 130
4.14 Topics for interdisciplinary research 130
Chapter 5
Two applications of the basic triple structure model 133
I. THE TRANSCRIPTION OF INTERACTIVE DISCOURSE
5.1 The need for a realistic transcription of speech 133
5.2 On the relevance of the registered signs and the risks of their omission
5.3 Two background modeis for the exhaustive organization of a transcription:
Interaction and conversation 135
5.4 The transcription of a conversational corpus 139
II. NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION IN FOREIGN-LANGUAGETEACHING
5.5 The unrealistic classroom acquisition of a foreign language and the academic
target of verbal-nonverbal fluency 143
5.6 The acquisition of linguistic and cultural repertoires:
Native learner versus foreign learner 145
5.7 The presentation ofparalinguistic material 148
5.8 Illustration and drilling for paralinguistic instruction 154
5.9 Distribution ofthekinesic material 155
5.10 The order of presentation of gestures, manners and postures 156
5-ii Illustration and description ofthe kinesic material 157
5.12 Classroom drills, tests, and course projects 159
5.13 Beyond language acquisition: A course on Intercultural Awareness 160
5.14 Conclusion 162
5.15 Topics for interdisciplinary research 163
Chapter 6
Nonverbal categories as personal and sociocultural identifiers 165
6.1 The need to classify and label behaviors 165
6.2 Emblems: Gestures for words 167
6.3 Speech markers: The movements ofour speaking 171
6.4 Space markers: Pointing at what is present or absent 177
6.5 Time markers: Past, present, future 178
6.6 Deictics: Pointing at people, things and concepts 179
6.7 Pictographs: Drawing with gestures 183
6.8 Echoics: Imitating what sounds 184
6.9 Kinetographs: Imitating what moves 185
6.10 Kinephonographs: Imitating movement and sound 186
6.11 Ideographs: Giving visual form to thoughts 187
6.12 Event tracers: How things happened 188
6.13 Identifiers: Giving visual form to concepts 188
6.14 Externalizers: Our reactions made visual 189
6.15 Self-adaptors: Contacting ourselves 198
6.16 Alter-adaptors: Contacting others 204
6.17 Body-adaptors: The intimates ofour body 211
6.18 Object-adaptors: Contacting objects 219
6.19 Conclusion 224
6.20 Topics for interdisciplinary research 224
Chapter 7
The structure of conversation 227
7.1 The study of conversation: The configuration ofthe encounter
and its interpersonal relationships 227
7.2 Speaker s and auditor s initial behaviors 233
7.3 Basic speaker-auditor turn-change behaviors 234
7.4 Secondary turn-change bevahiors 237
7.5 Listener-to-speaker behaviors I: Feedback 240
7.6 Listener-to-Speaker behaviors II: Listener s secondary activities 243
7.7 Speaker s secondary behaviors 246
7.8 Interlistener behaviors 248
7.9 Coinciding activities: Simultaneous behaviors and crossed
conversations 249
7.10 Acoustic and visual pauses or breaks 253
7.11 Conversational fluency, ontogenetic development, reduced interaction,
chronemics, and naturalness 266
7.12 Conclusion 268
7.13 Topics for interdisciplinary research 269
Chapter 8
Nonverbal communication in Interpretation 271
8.1 The total communicative approach to simultaneous and consecutive
Interpretation 271
8.2 The verbal and nonverbal components in the interpretation Situation:
Basic Systems 272
8.3 The fate of nonverbal Systems in interpretation 275
8.4 The fate of the basic structure language-paralanguage-kinesics in
interpretation 278
8.5 Interpretation in the total context of personal and environmental
interaction 279
8.6 The relationships between verbal and nonverbal in interpretation 281
8.7 Chronemics of interpretation 284
8.8 Silence and stillness in the interpretation Situation 284
8.9 The exchangeof nonverbal visual behaviors in interpretation 285
8.10 The structure of conversation in interpretation 288
8.11 Reduced interaction situations and the interpreter s responsibility 292
8.12 Conclusion 294
8.13 Topics for interdisciplinary research 295
Appendix 297
Notes 305
List of illustrations 319
Scientific references 321
Literary references 347
Index of literary authors and works cited 355
Name index 359
Subject index 365
Tables of Contents, Volumes II and III 370
|
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dewey-tens | 300 - Social sciences |
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spelling | Poyatos, Fernando Verfasser aut Nonverbal communication across disciplines 1 Culture, sensory interaction, speech, conversation Fernando Poyatos Amsterdam [u.a.] Benjamins 2002 XXXVI, 369 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier (DE-604)BV014313221 1 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009818942&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Poyatos, Fernando Nonverbal communication across disciplines |
title | Nonverbal communication across disciplines |
title_auth | Nonverbal communication across disciplines |
title_exact_search | Nonverbal communication across disciplines |
title_full | Nonverbal communication across disciplines 1 Culture, sensory interaction, speech, conversation Fernando Poyatos |
title_fullStr | Nonverbal communication across disciplines 1 Culture, sensory interaction, speech, conversation Fernando Poyatos |
title_full_unstemmed | Nonverbal communication across disciplines 1 Culture, sensory interaction, speech, conversation Fernando Poyatos |
title_short | Nonverbal communication across disciplines |
title_sort | nonverbal communication across disciplines culture sensory interaction speech conversation |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009818942&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV014313221 |
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