Conversational humour and (im)politeness: a pragmatic analysis of social interaction
"Conversational Humour and (Im)politeness is the first systematic study that offers a socio-pragmatic perspective on humorous practices such as teasing, mockery and taking the piss and their relation to (im)politeness. Analysing data from corpora, reality television and interviews in Australian...
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Abschlussarbeit Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia
John Benjamins Publishing Company
[2019]
|
Schriftenreihe: | Topics in humor research
volume 8 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | "Conversational Humour and (Im)politeness is the first systematic study that offers a socio-pragmatic perspective on humorous practices such as teasing, mockery and taking the piss and their relation to (im)politeness. Analysing data from corpora, reality television and interviews in Australian and British cultural contexts, this book contributes to cross-cultural and intercultural research on humour and its role in social interaction. Although, in both contexts, jocular verbal practices are highly valued and a positive response - the 'preferred reaction' - can be expected, the conceptualisation of what is seen as humorous can vary, especially in terms of what 'goes too far'. By examining how attempts at humour can occasion offence, presenting a distinction between 'frontstage' and 'backstage' perceptions of jocularity and looking at how language users evaluate jocular behaviours in interaction, this study shows how humour and (im)politeness are co-constructed and negotiated in discourse. This book will be of interest to scholars and students in pragmatics, conversational humour, (im)politeness, intercultural communication, discourse analysis, television studies and interaction in English-speaking contexts"-- |
Beschreibung: | X, 274 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9789027204134 |
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adam_text | Table of contents Acknowledgements CHAPTER 1 Introduction 1.1 The scope of this book 2 1.1.1 Why analyse two English-speaking cultural contexts? 1.2 A note on the transcription conventions 5 1.3 A note on the terminology used 5 1.4 The research questions 6 1.5 The structure of the book 7 3 CHAPTER 2 Meanwhile in the world of (im)politeness 2.1 Traditional approaches to politeness and impoliteness 11 2.1.1 Classic politeness theories and major critique of Brown and Levinson’s model 12 2.1.2 A note on the onset of linguistic impoliteness research 16 2.2 (Im)politeness in the era of discursive approaches 17 2.2.1 In search of a definition of (im)politeness 22 2.2.2 First-order and second-order concepts 24 2.2.3 The metapragmatics of (im)politeness 26 2.3 The view of (im)politeness taken in this research 28 CHAPTER 3 Data: From corpora to reality television to interviews 3.1 Corpora: The British National Corpus (BNQ and the Macquarie Dictionary database of Australian English (Ozcorp) 31 3.2 Reality television: Introducing Big Brother 35 3.2.1 Big Brother: The format and some local differences 37 3.2.2 Big Brother Australia 2012 and Big Brother UK 2012 41 3.3 Reality television, performance and real life 44
viii Conversational Humour and (Im)politeness 3.4 3.5 3.6 Reality television, (genuine) impoliteness, entertainment and (failed) humour 47 3.4.1 Big Brother. An impoliteness-oriented context? 51 Qualitative interviewing 53 3.5.1 The use of qualitative interviewing in this research 57 Summary 59 chapter 4 Conversational humour: Jocular verbal behaviours 4.1 Overview of approaches to teasing - the epitome of jocular verbal behaviours 62 4.2 A note on the intracultural and intercultural research into humour 4.3 Jocular face-threatening and face-supportive acts 68 4.3.1 Potentiality and genuineness (context and non-verbal cues) 4.4 Production-evaluation model 73 4.4.1 Impolite jocular behaviour 75 4.4.2 Non-impolite jocular behaviour 76 4.4.3 Non-polite jocular behaviour 77 4.4.4 Polite jocular behaviour 78 4.5 A corpus-assisted study of teasing: Evidence from the BNC and Ozcorp 79 4.5.1 Teasing how? Ways of doing teasing 80 4.5.2 Teasing why? Functions of teasing 83 4.5.3 Teasing and what then? After-teases 85 4.6 Summary 88 5 Jocular verbal behaviours in Australian and British cultural contexts 5.1 Jocularity, cultural values and interactional preferences 92 5.1.1 Not taking yourself too seriously 94 5.1.2 Self-deprecation 98 5.1.3 Taking the piss/mickey out of someone and rubbishing your mates 101 5.2 Public offence and/vs personal offence 108 5.2.1 The preferred reaction 113 5.2.2 Laughter and funniness in relation to public offence 118 5.3 Summary 123 61 66 70 chapter 91
Table of contents CHAPTER 6 Frontstage and backstage reactions to jocularity 125 6.1 Goffman, the presentation of self and reality television 125 6.2 Frontstage and backstage in the Big Brother house 129 6.3 From frontstage to backstage, from mock impoliteness to impoliteness 132 6.3.1 Big Brother Australia: “Everything he says to me it’s like he stabs me in the face” 133 6.3.2 Big Brother UK: “[S]he keeps winding me up about what happened the other day” 140 6.4 Summary 147 chapter 7 Negative evaluations of jocularity 7.1 General issues 150 7.2 Specific issues 153 7.2.1 Similarities in the Australian and British Big Brother houses 7.2.2 Differences between the Australian and British Big Brother houses 162 7.2.3 Division of the specific issues into categories 168 7.3 Summary 170 chapter 149 154 8 Interviewees’ attitudes to jocularity 173 8.1 The metapragmatics of jocular verbal behaviours 173 8.2 Different perspectives in the interviewees’ evaluations 176 8.2.1 From the target’s point of view 178 8.2.2 From the instigator’s point of view 179 8.2.3 From the non-participant’s point of view 179 8.3 Funnyp vs funnyn p 180 8.4 Tendencies in interviewees’ evaluations of jocularity and impoliteness in the Big Brother houses 183 8.4.1 Two-party Australian interaction: “The treadmill” 184 8.4.2 Multi-party British interaction: “McDonald’s on the pyramid” 206 8.5 Multi-party Australian-British interaction: Intracultural and intercultural evaluations 227 8.5.1 Intracultural evaluations 229 8.5.2 Intercultural evaluations 234 8.6 Summary 241 ix
x Conversational Humour and (Im)politeness 9 Conclusions 9.1 Contributions to the field 245 9.2 Future research directions and raised questions CHAPTER 245 248 References 251 Subject index 27Յ
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author | Sinkeviciute, Valeria |
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spelling | Sinkeviciute, Valeria Verfasser (DE-588)1200585062 aut Conversational humour and (im)politeness a pragmatic analysis of social interaction Valeria Sinkeviciute ; the University of Queensland Amsterdam ; Philadelphia John Benjamins Publishing Company [2019] X, 274 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Topics in humor research volume 8 Dissertation University of Antwerp, Belgium "Conversational Humour and (Im)politeness is the first systematic study that offers a socio-pragmatic perspective on humorous practices such as teasing, mockery and taking the piss and their relation to (im)politeness. Analysing data from corpora, reality television and interviews in Australian and British cultural contexts, this book contributes to cross-cultural and intercultural research on humour and its role in social interaction. Although, in both contexts, jocular verbal practices are highly valued and a positive response - the 'preferred reaction' - can be expected, the conceptualisation of what is seen as humorous can vary, especially in terms of what 'goes too far'. By examining how attempts at humour can occasion offence, presenting a distinction between 'frontstage' and 'backstage' perceptions of jocularity and looking at how language users evaluate jocular behaviours in interaction, this study shows how humour and (im)politeness are co-constructed and negotiated in discourse. This book will be of interest to scholars and students in pragmatics, conversational humour, (im)politeness, intercultural communication, discourse analysis, television studies and interaction in English-speaking contexts"-- Humor (DE-588)4026170-0 gnd rswk-swf Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd rswk-swf Unhöflichkeit (DE-588)4743284-6 gnd rswk-swf Höflichkeit (DE-588)4160349-7 gnd rswk-swf Teasing Humor and wiyt Politeness (Linguistics) Interpersonal relations (DE-588)4113937-9 Hochschulschrift gnd-content Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 s Humor (DE-588)4026170-0 s Höflichkeit (DE-588)4160349-7 s Unhöflichkeit (DE-588)4743284-6 s DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-90-272-6211-0 Topics in humor research volume 8 (DE-604)BV041393307 8 Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=031635785&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Sinkeviciute, Valeria Conversational humour and (im)politeness a pragmatic analysis of social interaction Topics in humor research Humor (DE-588)4026170-0 gnd Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd Unhöflichkeit (DE-588)4743284-6 gnd Höflichkeit (DE-588)4160349-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4026170-0 (DE-588)4014777-0 (DE-588)4743284-6 (DE-588)4160349-7 (DE-588)4113937-9 |
title | Conversational humour and (im)politeness a pragmatic analysis of social interaction |
title_auth | Conversational humour and (im)politeness a pragmatic analysis of social interaction |
title_exact_search | Conversational humour and (im)politeness a pragmatic analysis of social interaction |
title_full | Conversational humour and (im)politeness a pragmatic analysis of social interaction Valeria Sinkeviciute ; the University of Queensland |
title_fullStr | Conversational humour and (im)politeness a pragmatic analysis of social interaction Valeria Sinkeviciute ; the University of Queensland |
title_full_unstemmed | Conversational humour and (im)politeness a pragmatic analysis of social interaction Valeria Sinkeviciute ; the University of Queensland |
title_short | Conversational humour and (im)politeness |
title_sort | conversational humour and im politeness a pragmatic analysis of social interaction |
title_sub | a pragmatic analysis of social interaction |
topic | Humor (DE-588)4026170-0 gnd Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd Unhöflichkeit (DE-588)4743284-6 gnd Höflichkeit (DE-588)4160349-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Humor Englisch Unhöflichkeit Höflichkeit Hochschulschrift |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=031635785&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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work_keys_str_mv | AT sinkeviciutevaleria conversationalhumourandimpolitenessapragmaticanalysisofsocialinteraction |