Exploring the Language of Drama: From Text to ContextJonathan Culpeper, Mick Short, Peter Verdonk Routledge, 2002/01/08 - 192 ページ Exploring the Language of Drama introduces students to the stylistic analysis of drama. Written in an engaging and accessible style, the contributors use techniques of language analysis, particularly from discourse analysis, cognitive linguistics and pragmatics, to explore the language of plays. The contributors demonstrate the validity of analysing the text of a play, as opposed to focusing on performance. Divided into four broad, yet interconnecting groups, the chapters:
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... talking on the telephone, even though his words are not specified, and must perform an appropriate telephone conversation ... behaviour. The actress playing Polly can choose what behaviour to be performing behind the desk, but it must be ...
... talking on the telephone, even though his words are not specified, and must perform an appropriate telephone conversation ... behaviour. The actress playing Polly can choose what behaviour to be performing behind the desk, but it must be ...
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absurd accusation addressee Alison Anderson Arthur Miller assumptions audience Austin Brown and Levinson Carol Cathy chapter characterization characters Charlie Charlie’s CHOUBERT Co-operative Principle cognitive Colonel Connie Booth container context conventions conversational behaviour critical Czechoslovakia David Mamet discourse analysis dramatic texts Duncan’s example extract Falstaff Fawlty Towers floor flouts Grice’s HALE hearer Heilman Helena Hollar illocutionary act implicates implicatures impoliteness incongruity inferences interaction interpretation interruptions Jacques Weber Jimmy Jimmy’s John John Cleese John’s Karen Kate Kate’s kiou language lecturer linguistic look Macbeth Mamet maxim McKendrick metaphor negative face Nudge nudge odd talk Oleanna participants particular path Paul Simpson performance perlocutionary Petruchio phatic play play’s Polly positive face pragmatic Professional Foul question Request Richards scene schemata Shakespeare’s situation social speak speaker speech acts stage directions Stoppard student stylistics suggests teaching schema Tituba topic turn turn-taking utterance verbal Victoria words