Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language: an ethnography of Bininj Gunwok communication
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amsterdam/Philadelphia
John Benjamins Publishing Company
2013
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Schriftenreihe: | Culture and language use
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | FAW01 FAW02 Volltext Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | 7.2 A story about hunting kangaroos Print version record |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource (294 pages) |
ISBN: | 9027271240 9789027271242 |
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505 | 8 | |a Culture, Interaction and Person Referencein an Australian Language; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; In Memoriam; Preface and acknowledgements; Abbreviations and orthographic conventions; Introduction; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Linguistic anthropology; 1.3 The indeterminacy of reference; 1.4 Bininj Gunwok, dialects and location.; 1.5 Eastern Bininj Gunwok in brief geographical and historical context; 1.6 Synopsis; Bininj Gunwok Kinship Systems; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Moieties, subsections and other social categories; 2.3 Subsections in Bininj Gunwok | |
505 | 8 | |a 2.4 Bininj Gunwok basic kin terms2.5 Arguments about Bininj Gunwok kinship; 2.6 Generation skewing; 2.7 Ceremonial moieties; 2.8 Concluding remarks; Ways of referring to people in Bininj Gunwok; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Diversity in person reference; 3.3 Basic kin terms; 3.4 Other types of non-vocative terms; 3.5 Dyadic terms; 3.6 Kinship verbs; 3.6.1 Successive generation patrilineal and matrilineal kin, bornang, yawmang; 3.6.2 Semantics of kinship verbs; 3.6.3 Other kinship verb expressions; 3.7 Other forms of person reference; 3.7.1 Reference by subsection | |
505 | 8 | |a 3.7.2 Use of clan names in reference3.7.3 Cross-sex sibling reference; 3.7.4 Reference to the deceased; 3.7.5 Reference by matrilineal phratry terms; 3.7.6 Nicknames; 3.8 Some concluding comments; The kun-debi system of triadic kinship reference; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Triadic kinship systems in other languages; 4.3 Deficiencies of the triangle analogy; 4.4 Centricity; 4.4.1 Centricity type; 4.4.1.1 Egocentric terms; 4.4.1.2 Tucentric terms; 4.4.1.3 Tucentric dyad; 4.4.1.4 Dicentric terms; 4.4.1.5 'Isosceles' terms; 4.4.1.6 Acentric terms; 4.4.1.7 Equilateral terms; 4.4.2 centricity encoding | |
505 | 8 | |a 4.4.3 centricity stability4.5 Linguistic form and semantics of kun-debi terms; 4.5.1 na-karrng/ngal-karrng; 4.5.2 na-kiwalak/ngal-kiwalak; 4.5.3 -dadjkawarre; 4.5.4 pronouns and kun-kurrng register as kun-debi; 4.5.5 Kun-debi and neutralization; 4.6 Predicting centricity; 4.6.1 The juniority-seniority principle; 4.6.2 The markedness of certain affinal kin; 4.7 Kun-debi and indeterminacy; 4.8 Learning Kun-debi; 4.9 Concluding comments; Reference, grammar and indeterminacy in Bininj Gunwok conversation; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Person reference, reference tracking and semantic generality | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.2.1 Some grammatical background5.2.2 Theorizing a 'preference for use of the implicit over the explicit'; 5.3 Background local knowledge and inferring the identity of underspecified referents- some examples; 5.4 Generic and impersonal uses of some verbal participant prefixes; 5.5 Concluding comments; Culture, reference and circumspection; 6.1 The language of ceremony and esoteric knowledge; 6.2 Circumspect language and kinship relationships characterised by restraint; 6.3 The circumspect nature of requests; 6.4 Joking; 6.5 Concluding comments; The path of inference; 7.1 Introduction | |
505 | 8 | |a The study of person reference stands at the cross-roads of linguistics, anthropology and psychology. As one aspect of an ethnography of communication, this book deals with a single problem - how one knows who is being talked about in conversation - from a rich and varied ethnographic perspective. Through a combination of grammatical agreement and free pronouns, Bininj Gunwok possesses a pronominal system that, according to current theoretical accounts in linguistics, should facilitate clear cut reference. However, the descriptions of Bininj Gunwok conversation in this volume demonstrate that f | |
650 | 4 | |a Australian languages / Discourse analysis | |
650 | 4 | |a Australian languages / Grammar | |
650 | 4 | |a Language and culture / Australia | |
650 | 4 | |a Sociolinguistics / Australia | |
650 | 7 | |a FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY / Miscellaneous |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 4 | |a Grammatik | |
650 | 4 | |a Australian languages |x Grammar | |
650 | 4 | |a Australian languages |x Discourse analysis | |
650 | 4 | |a Language and culture |z Australia | |
650 | 4 | |a Sociolinguistics |z Australia | |
651 | 4 | |a Australien | |
776 | 0 | 8 | |i Erscheint auch als |n Druck-Ausgabe |a Garde, Murray |t Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language : An ethnography of Bininj Gunwok communication |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Titel: Culture, interaction and person reference in an Australian language
Autor: Garde, Murray
Jahr: 2013
Table of contents Preface and acknowledgements xi Abbreviations and orthographic conventions xvii CHAPTER 1 Introduction 1.1 Introduction 1 1.2 Linguistic anthropology 6 1.3 The indeterminacy of reference 10 1.4 Bininj Gunwok, dialects and location 14 1.5 Eastern Bininj Gunwok in brief geographical and historical context 1.6 Synopsis 20 CHAPTER 2 Bininj Gunwok kinship systems 23 2.1 Introduction 23 2.2 Moieties, subsections and other social categories 25 2.3 Subsections in Bininj Gunwok 27 2.4 Bininj Gunwok basic kin terms 32 2.5 Arguments about Bininj Gunwok kinship 35 2.6 Generation skewing 39 2.7 Ceremonial moieties 44 2.8 Concluding remarks 46 chapter 3 Ways of referring to people in Bininj Gunwok 49 3.1 Introduction 49 3.2 Diversity in person reference 49 3.3 Basic kin terms 50 3.4 Other types of non-vocative terms 53 3.5 Dyadic terms 59 3.6 Kinship verbs 60 3.6.1 Successive generation patrilineal and matrilinea! kin, bornang, yawmang 60 3.6.2 Semantics of kinship verbs 63 3.6.3 Other kinship verb expressions 69 1 18
vi Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language 3.7 Other forms of person reference 71 3.7.1 Reference by subsection 71 3.7.2 Use of clan names in reference 75 3.7.3 Cross-sex sibling reference 78 3.7.4 Reference to the deceased 87 3.7.5 Reference by matrilineal phratry terms 89 3.7.6 Nicknames 90 3.8 Some concluding comments 93 CHAPTER 4 The kun-debi system of triadic kinship reference 95 4.1 Introduction 95 4.2 Triadic kinship systems in other languages 98 4.3 Deficiencies of the triangle analogy 101 4.4 Centricity 103 4.4.1 Centricity type 103 4 - 4 - 1.1 Egocentric terms 104 4.4.1.2 Tucentric terms 105 4 - 4 - 1-3 Tucentric dyad 105 4 - 4 - 1-4 Dicentric terms 106 4 - 4 - 1-5 ‘Isosceles’ terms 107 4.4.1.6 Acentric terms 108 4.4.1.7 Equilateral terms 108 4.4.2 Centricity encoding 109 4.4.3 Centricity stability 110 4.5 Linguistic form and semantics of kun-debi terms 111 4.5.1 na-karrng/ngal-karmg 112 4.5.2 na-kiwalak/ngal-kiwalak 114 4.5.3 -dadjkawarre 115 4.5.4 Pronouns and kun-kurrng register as kun-debi 115 4.5.5 Kun-debi and neutralization 116 4.6 Predicting centricity 119 4.6.1 The juniority-seniority principle 119 4.6.2 The markedness of certain affinal kin 121 4.7 Kun-debi and indeterminacy 125 4.8 Learning Kun-debi 131 4.9 Concluding comments 132 chapter 5 Reference, grammar and indeterminacy in Bininj Gunwok conversation 135 5.1 Introduction 135
Table of contents vn 5.2 Person reference, reference tracking and semantic generality 136 5.2.1 Some grammatical background 138 5.2.2 Theorizing a preference for use of the implicit over the explicit’ 143 5.3 Background local knowledge and inferring the identity of underspecified referents - some examples 150 5.4 Generic and impersonal uses of some verbal participant prefixes 155 5.5 Concluding comments 163 CHAPTER 6 Culture, reference and circumspection 165 6.1 The language of ceremony and esoteric knowledge 167 6.2 Circumspect language and kinship relationships characterised by restraint 178 6.3 The circumspect nature of requests 180 6.4 Joking 181 6.5 Concluding comments 184 CHAPTER 7 The path of inference: The unravelling of referring expressions 185 7.1 Introduction 185 7.2 A story about hunting kangaroos 187 7.2.1 Background 187 7.2.2 Episode 1 : First mentions - clans names and place names 187 7.2.3 Episodes 2 3 : Kun-derbi and basic kin terms 191 7.2.4 Episode 4 : Kun-derbi and nicknames 194 7.2.5 Episode 5 : Ceremonial names and basic kin terms 199 7.2.6 Episode 6: Multiple referring expressions 201 7.2.7 Episode 7 : Referring expressions in interactive competition 206 7.3 Telephone conversations 210 7.4 Other kinds of refusal to upgrade recognitional expressions 218 7.5 Concluding comments 219 CHAPTER 8 The trouble with Wamud: A conversational example of unsuccessful reference 221 8.1 Introduction 221 8.2 Introducing the problem referent (lines 1 - 16 ) 223 8.3 Recognition via linking kin 227 8.3.1 Link number 1 227 8.3.2 Link number 2 : Establishing common ground 230
vin Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language 8.3.3 Other linking kin 233 8.3.4 Linking kin: Circumspect and associative reference 236 8.4 Conclusion - recognition is not always essential to ‘fruitful’ reference 238 chapter 9 Person reference: Culture, cognition and theories of communication 241 9.1 In summary 241 9.2 Bininj Gunwok person reference and theories of communication 245 9.2.1 Recognitional demonstratives 250 9.2.2 Pronouns in switch reference 251 9.3 Some general comments about circumspection 253 9.4 A preference for the implicit as a form of verbal art 255 References 259 Language index 269 Subject index 271
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Garde, Murray |
author_facet | Garde, Murray |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Garde, Murray |
author_variant | m g mg |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV043033511 |
collection | ZDB-4-EBA |
contents | Culture, Interaction and Person Referencein an Australian Language; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; In Memoriam; Preface and acknowledgements; Abbreviations and orthographic conventions; Introduction; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Linguistic anthropology; 1.3 The indeterminacy of reference; 1.4 Bininj Gunwok, dialects and location.; 1.5 Eastern Bininj Gunwok in brief geographical and historical context; 1.6 Synopsis; Bininj Gunwok Kinship Systems; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Moieties, subsections and other social categories; 2.3 Subsections in Bininj Gunwok 2.4 Bininj Gunwok basic kin terms2.5 Arguments about Bininj Gunwok kinship; 2.6 Generation skewing; 2.7 Ceremonial moieties; 2.8 Concluding remarks; Ways of referring to people in Bininj Gunwok; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Diversity in person reference; 3.3 Basic kin terms; 3.4 Other types of non-vocative terms; 3.5 Dyadic terms; 3.6 Kinship verbs; 3.6.1 Successive generation patrilineal and matrilineal kin, bornang, yawmang; 3.6.2 Semantics of kinship verbs; 3.6.3 Other kinship verb expressions; 3.7 Other forms of person reference; 3.7.1 Reference by subsection 3.7.2 Use of clan names in reference3.7.3 Cross-sex sibling reference; 3.7.4 Reference to the deceased; 3.7.5 Reference by matrilineal phratry terms; 3.7.6 Nicknames; 3.8 Some concluding comments; The kun-debi system of triadic kinship reference; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Triadic kinship systems in other languages; 4.3 Deficiencies of the triangle analogy; 4.4 Centricity; 4.4.1 Centricity type; 4.4.1.1 Egocentric terms; 4.4.1.2 Tucentric terms; 4.4.1.3 Tucentric dyad; 4.4.1.4 Dicentric terms; 4.4.1.5 'Isosceles' terms; 4.4.1.6 Acentric terms; 4.4.1.7 Equilateral terms; 4.4.2 centricity encoding 4.4.3 centricity stability4.5 Linguistic form and semantics of kun-debi terms; 4.5.1 na-karrng/ngal-karrng; 4.5.2 na-kiwalak/ngal-kiwalak; 4.5.3 -dadjkawarre; 4.5.4 pronouns and kun-kurrng register as kun-debi; 4.5.5 Kun-debi and neutralization; 4.6 Predicting centricity; 4.6.1 The juniority-seniority principle; 4.6.2 The markedness of certain affinal kin; 4.7 Kun-debi and indeterminacy; 4.8 Learning Kun-debi; 4.9 Concluding comments; Reference, grammar and indeterminacy in Bininj Gunwok conversation; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Person reference, reference tracking and semantic generality 5.2.1 Some grammatical background5.2.2 Theorizing a 'preference for use of the implicit over the explicit'; 5.3 Background local knowledge and inferring the identity of underspecified referents- some examples; 5.4 Generic and impersonal uses of some verbal participant prefixes; 5.5 Concluding comments; Culture, reference and circumspection; 6.1 The language of ceremony and esoteric knowledge; 6.2 Circumspect language and kinship relationships characterised by restraint; 6.3 The circumspect nature of requests; 6.4 Joking; 6.5 Concluding comments; The path of inference; 7.1 Introduction The study of person reference stands at the cross-roads of linguistics, anthropology and psychology. As one aspect of an ethnography of communication, this book deals with a single problem - how one knows who is being talked about in conversation - from a rich and varied ethnographic perspective. Through a combination of grammatical agreement and free pronouns, Bininj Gunwok possesses a pronominal system that, according to current theoretical accounts in linguistics, should facilitate clear cut reference. However, the descriptions of Bininj Gunwok conversation in this volume demonstrate that f |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)960203519 (DE-599)BVBBV043033511 |
dewey-full | 499.15 |
dewey-hundreds | 400 - Language |
dewey-ones | 499 - Austronesian & other languages |
dewey-raw | 499.15 |
dewey-search | 499.15 |
dewey-sort | 3499.15 |
dewey-tens | 490 - Other languages |
discipline | Außereuropäische Sprachen und Literaturen |
format | Electronic eBook |
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geographic | Australien |
geographic_facet | Australien |
id | DE-604.BV043033511 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T07:15:33Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9027271240 9789027271242 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-028458161 |
oclc_num | 960203519 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-1046 DE-1047 |
owner_facet | DE-1046 DE-1047 |
physical | 1 online resource (294 pages) |
psigel | ZDB-4-EBA ZDB-4-EBA FAW_PDA_EBA |
publishDate | 2013 |
publishDateSearch | 2013 |
publishDateSort | 2013 |
publisher | John Benjamins Publishing Company |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Culture and language use |
spelling | Garde, Murray Verfasser aut Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language an ethnography of Bininj Gunwok communication Amsterdam/Philadelphia John Benjamins Publishing Company 2013 1 online resource (294 pages) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Culture and language use 7.2 A story about hunting kangaroos Print version record Culture, Interaction and Person Referencein an Australian Language; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; In Memoriam; Preface and acknowledgements; Abbreviations and orthographic conventions; Introduction; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Linguistic anthropology; 1.3 The indeterminacy of reference; 1.4 Bininj Gunwok, dialects and location.; 1.5 Eastern Bininj Gunwok in brief geographical and historical context; 1.6 Synopsis; Bininj Gunwok Kinship Systems; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Moieties, subsections and other social categories; 2.3 Subsections in Bininj Gunwok 2.4 Bininj Gunwok basic kin terms2.5 Arguments about Bininj Gunwok kinship; 2.6 Generation skewing; 2.7 Ceremonial moieties; 2.8 Concluding remarks; Ways of referring to people in Bininj Gunwok; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Diversity in person reference; 3.3 Basic kin terms; 3.4 Other types of non-vocative terms; 3.5 Dyadic terms; 3.6 Kinship verbs; 3.6.1 Successive generation patrilineal and matrilineal kin, bornang, yawmang; 3.6.2 Semantics of kinship verbs; 3.6.3 Other kinship verb expressions; 3.7 Other forms of person reference; 3.7.1 Reference by subsection 3.7.2 Use of clan names in reference3.7.3 Cross-sex sibling reference; 3.7.4 Reference to the deceased; 3.7.5 Reference by matrilineal phratry terms; 3.7.6 Nicknames; 3.8 Some concluding comments; The kun-debi system of triadic kinship reference; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Triadic kinship systems in other languages; 4.3 Deficiencies of the triangle analogy; 4.4 Centricity; 4.4.1 Centricity type; 4.4.1.1 Egocentric terms; 4.4.1.2 Tucentric terms; 4.4.1.3 Tucentric dyad; 4.4.1.4 Dicentric terms; 4.4.1.5 'Isosceles' terms; 4.4.1.6 Acentric terms; 4.4.1.7 Equilateral terms; 4.4.2 centricity encoding 4.4.3 centricity stability4.5 Linguistic form and semantics of kun-debi terms; 4.5.1 na-karrng/ngal-karrng; 4.5.2 na-kiwalak/ngal-kiwalak; 4.5.3 -dadjkawarre; 4.5.4 pronouns and kun-kurrng register as kun-debi; 4.5.5 Kun-debi and neutralization; 4.6 Predicting centricity; 4.6.1 The juniority-seniority principle; 4.6.2 The markedness of certain affinal kin; 4.7 Kun-debi and indeterminacy; 4.8 Learning Kun-debi; 4.9 Concluding comments; Reference, grammar and indeterminacy in Bininj Gunwok conversation; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Person reference, reference tracking and semantic generality 5.2.1 Some grammatical background5.2.2 Theorizing a 'preference for use of the implicit over the explicit'; 5.3 Background local knowledge and inferring the identity of underspecified referents- some examples; 5.4 Generic and impersonal uses of some verbal participant prefixes; 5.5 Concluding comments; Culture, reference and circumspection; 6.1 The language of ceremony and esoteric knowledge; 6.2 Circumspect language and kinship relationships characterised by restraint; 6.3 The circumspect nature of requests; 6.4 Joking; 6.5 Concluding comments; The path of inference; 7.1 Introduction The study of person reference stands at the cross-roads of linguistics, anthropology and psychology. As one aspect of an ethnography of communication, this book deals with a single problem - how one knows who is being talked about in conversation - from a rich and varied ethnographic perspective. Through a combination of grammatical agreement and free pronouns, Bininj Gunwok possesses a pronominal system that, according to current theoretical accounts in linguistics, should facilitate clear cut reference. However, the descriptions of Bininj Gunwok conversation in this volume demonstrate that f Australian languages / Discourse analysis Australian languages / Grammar Language and culture / Australia Sociolinguistics / Australia FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY / Miscellaneous bisacsh Grammatik Australian languages Grammar Australian languages Discourse analysis Language and culture Australia Sociolinguistics Australia Australien Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Garde, Murray Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language : An ethnography of Bininj Gunwok communication http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=658575 Aggregator Volltext HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028458161&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Garde, Murray Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language an ethnography of Bininj Gunwok communication Culture, Interaction and Person Referencein an Australian Language; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; In Memoriam; Preface and acknowledgements; Abbreviations and orthographic conventions; Introduction; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Linguistic anthropology; 1.3 The indeterminacy of reference; 1.4 Bininj Gunwok, dialects and location.; 1.5 Eastern Bininj Gunwok in brief geographical and historical context; 1.6 Synopsis; Bininj Gunwok Kinship Systems; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Moieties, subsections and other social categories; 2.3 Subsections in Bininj Gunwok 2.4 Bininj Gunwok basic kin terms2.5 Arguments about Bininj Gunwok kinship; 2.6 Generation skewing; 2.7 Ceremonial moieties; 2.8 Concluding remarks; Ways of referring to people in Bininj Gunwok; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Diversity in person reference; 3.3 Basic kin terms; 3.4 Other types of non-vocative terms; 3.5 Dyadic terms; 3.6 Kinship verbs; 3.6.1 Successive generation patrilineal and matrilineal kin, bornang, yawmang; 3.6.2 Semantics of kinship verbs; 3.6.3 Other kinship verb expressions; 3.7 Other forms of person reference; 3.7.1 Reference by subsection 3.7.2 Use of clan names in reference3.7.3 Cross-sex sibling reference; 3.7.4 Reference to the deceased; 3.7.5 Reference by matrilineal phratry terms; 3.7.6 Nicknames; 3.8 Some concluding comments; The kun-debi system of triadic kinship reference; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Triadic kinship systems in other languages; 4.3 Deficiencies of the triangle analogy; 4.4 Centricity; 4.4.1 Centricity type; 4.4.1.1 Egocentric terms; 4.4.1.2 Tucentric terms; 4.4.1.3 Tucentric dyad; 4.4.1.4 Dicentric terms; 4.4.1.5 'Isosceles' terms; 4.4.1.6 Acentric terms; 4.4.1.7 Equilateral terms; 4.4.2 centricity encoding 4.4.3 centricity stability4.5 Linguistic form and semantics of kun-debi terms; 4.5.1 na-karrng/ngal-karrng; 4.5.2 na-kiwalak/ngal-kiwalak; 4.5.3 -dadjkawarre; 4.5.4 pronouns and kun-kurrng register as kun-debi; 4.5.5 Kun-debi and neutralization; 4.6 Predicting centricity; 4.6.1 The juniority-seniority principle; 4.6.2 The markedness of certain affinal kin; 4.7 Kun-debi and indeterminacy; 4.8 Learning Kun-debi; 4.9 Concluding comments; Reference, grammar and indeterminacy in Bininj Gunwok conversation; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Person reference, reference tracking and semantic generality 5.2.1 Some grammatical background5.2.2 Theorizing a 'preference for use of the implicit over the explicit'; 5.3 Background local knowledge and inferring the identity of underspecified referents- some examples; 5.4 Generic and impersonal uses of some verbal participant prefixes; 5.5 Concluding comments; Culture, reference and circumspection; 6.1 The language of ceremony and esoteric knowledge; 6.2 Circumspect language and kinship relationships characterised by restraint; 6.3 The circumspect nature of requests; 6.4 Joking; 6.5 Concluding comments; The path of inference; 7.1 Introduction The study of person reference stands at the cross-roads of linguistics, anthropology and psychology. As one aspect of an ethnography of communication, this book deals with a single problem - how one knows who is being talked about in conversation - from a rich and varied ethnographic perspective. Through a combination of grammatical agreement and free pronouns, Bininj Gunwok possesses a pronominal system that, according to current theoretical accounts in linguistics, should facilitate clear cut reference. However, the descriptions of Bininj Gunwok conversation in this volume demonstrate that f Australian languages / Discourse analysis Australian languages / Grammar Language and culture / Australia Sociolinguistics / Australia FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY / Miscellaneous bisacsh Grammatik Australian languages Grammar Australian languages Discourse analysis Language and culture Australia Sociolinguistics Australia |
title | Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language an ethnography of Bininj Gunwok communication |
title_auth | Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language an ethnography of Bininj Gunwok communication |
title_exact_search | Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language an ethnography of Bininj Gunwok communication |
title_full | Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language an ethnography of Bininj Gunwok communication |
title_fullStr | Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language an ethnography of Bininj Gunwok communication |
title_full_unstemmed | Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language an ethnography of Bininj Gunwok communication |
title_short | Culture, Interaction and Person Reference in an Australian Language |
title_sort | culture interaction and person reference in an australian language an ethnography of bininj gunwok communication |
title_sub | an ethnography of Bininj Gunwok communication |
topic | Australian languages / Discourse analysis Australian languages / Grammar Language and culture / Australia Sociolinguistics / Australia FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY / Miscellaneous bisacsh Grammatik Australian languages Grammar Australian languages Discourse analysis Language and culture Australia Sociolinguistics Australia |
topic_facet | Australian languages / Discourse analysis Australian languages / Grammar Language and culture / Australia Sociolinguistics / Australia FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY / Miscellaneous Grammatik Australian languages Grammar Australian languages Discourse analysis Language and culture Australia Sociolinguistics Australia Australien |
url | http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=658575 http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028458161&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT gardemurray cultureinteractionandpersonreferenceinanaustralianlanguageanethnographyofbininjgunwokcommunication |