- Home
- Books
Books
To browse by subfields of a subject, please start on the Subjects tab in the navigation bar/menu, then filter by subject-subcategory and by content type.
Information on Forthcoming Books can be found on the benjamins.com website.
3601 - 3620 of 4243 results
Subject
- Linguistics [3712] http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/lin
- Literature & Literary Studies [310] http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/lit
- Philosophy [273] http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/phil
- Communication Studies [267] http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/comm
- Translation & Interpreting Studies [265] http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/tran
- Psychology [154] http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/psy
- Consciousness Research [115] http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/cons
- Terminology & Lexicography [90] http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/term
- Miscellaneous [39] http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/misc
- Sociology [27] http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/soc
- Art & Art History [18] http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/art
- Interaction Studies [16] http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/is
- More Hide
Year
- 2024 [24] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2024
- 2023 [91] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2023
- 2022 [96] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2022
- 2021 [118] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2021
- 2020 [131] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2020
- 2019 [119] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2019
- 2018 [152] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2018
- 2017 [152] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2017
- 2016 [147] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2016
- 2015 [148] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2015
- 2014 [166] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2014
- 2013 [151] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2013
- 2012 [141] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2012
- 2011 [155] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2011
- 2010 [130] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2010
- 2009 [133] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2009
- 2008 [141] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2008
- 2007 [136] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2007
- 2006 [100] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2006
- 2005 [101] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2005
- 2004 [111] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2004
- 2003 [110] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2003
- 2002 [123] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2002
- 2001 [104] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2001
- 2000 [117] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 2000
- 1999 [87] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1999
- 1998 [69] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1998
- 1997 [73] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1997
- 1996 [69] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1996
- 1995 [55] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1995
- 1994 [58] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1994
- 1993 [58] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1993
- 1992 [68] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1992
- 1991 [74] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1991
- 1990 [51] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1990
- 1989 [39] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1989
- 1988 [45] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1988
- 1987 [46] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1987
- 1986 [52] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1986
- 1985 [48] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1985
- 1984 [42] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1984
- 1983 [40] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1983
- 1982 [31] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1982
- 1981 [31] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1981
- 1980 [30] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1980
- 1979 [23] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1979
- 1978 [14] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1978
- 1977 [15] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1977
- 1976 [7] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1976
- 1975 [5] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1975
- 1974 [6] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1974
- 1973 [3] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1973
- 1972 [1] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1972
- 1971 [2] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1971
- 1969 [3] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1969
- 1967 [1] http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/yearOfPublication 1967
- More Hide
-
-
Stability, Variation and Change of Word-Order Patterns over Time
Editor(s): Rosanna Sornicola, Erich Poppe and Ariel Shisha-HalevyPublication Date December 2000More LessThe issue of permanence and change of word-order patterns has long been debated in both historical linguistics and structural theories. The interest in this theme has been revamped by contemporary research in typology with its emphasis on correlation or ‘harmonies’ of structures of word-order as explicative principles of both synchronic and diachronic processes. The aim of this book is to stimulate a critical reconsideration of perspectives and methods in the study of continuities and discontinuities of word-order patterns. Bringing together contributions by specialists of various theoretical backgrounds and with expertise in different language families or groups (Caucasian, Hamito-Semitic, and — among Indo-European — Hittite, Greek, Celtic, Germanic, Slavonic, Romance), the book addresses issues like the notions of stability, variation and change of word-order and their interrelations, the interplay of syntactic and pragmatic factors, and the role of internal and external factors in synchronic and diachronic dynamics of word-order. The book contains a selection of papers presented at a workshop held at the XIII International Conference on Historical Linguistics (Düsseldorf, August 1997) and additonal invited contributions.
-
-
-
STAEFCRAEFT
Editor(s): Elmer H. Antonsen and Hans Henrich HockPublication Date September 1991More LessThe first Symposium on Germanic Linguistics was organized at the University of Chicago by Jan Terje Faarlund. The notable success of this undertaking led Elmer H. Antonsen, Hans Henrich Hock, and James W. Marchand to arrange the Second Symposium on Germanic Linguistics at the University of Illinois. This volume contains revised versions of selected papers from the two symposia. The thirteen papers cover a broad cross-section of Germanic linguistics, including problems in synchronic syntax, mainly of Dutch and German; the synchronic morphology of German; synchronic morphophonology of various Germanic languages; historical and comparative Germanic phonology; language contact and early Germanic morphosyntax; and early Germanic historical and comparative syntax, with extensive reference to Beowulf. Bibliographic references are consolidated in a single Master List of References; there also is an Index of Names.
-
-
-
Stance in Talk
Author(s): Ruey-Jiuan Regina WuPublication Date June 2004More LessGuided by the methodology of conversation analysis (CA), this book explores how participants in Mandarin conversation display stance in the unfolding development of action and interaction, and, in particular, how this is accomplished through the use of two Mandarin final particles. Through a close examination of the sequential environments of these two particles and the interactional work accomplished by their use, the research presented in this book seeks to demonstrate how a participant-oriented, action-based micro approach to data can help us gain analytic leverage in understanding the functions and meanings of these particles – an area which has long posed a challenge to Chinese linguists. On the other hand, in utilizing a CA-based framework applied to Mandarin, this study also seeks to contribute to conversation analytic research by revealing previously uninvestigated language-specific phenomena while at the same time showing how talk-in-interaction in a non-western language, i.e., Mandarin, can also display the same striking systematicity and orderliness as observed in many western languages. As one of the pioneering CA studies of Mandarin, this book will be of interest to researchers in Chinese linguistics and conversation analysis, as well as those in fields which touch upon the relationships between languages and cultures.
-
-
-
Stancetaking in Discourse
Editor(s): Robert EnglebretsonPublication Date October 2007More LessThis volume contributes to the burgeoning field of research on stance by offering a variety of studies based in natural discourse. These collected papers explore the situated, pragmatic, and interactional character of stancetaking, and present new models and conceptions of stance to spark future research. Central to the volume is the claim that stancetaking encompasses five general principles: it involves physical, attitudinal and/or moral positioning; it is a public action; it is inherently dialogic, interactional, and sequential; it indexes broader sociocultural contexts; and it is consequential to the interactants. Each paper explores one or more of these dimensions of stance from perspectives including interactional linguistics and conversation analysis, corpus linguistics, language description, discourse analysis, and sociocultural linguistics. Research languages include conversational American English, colloquial Indonesian, and Finnish. The understanding of stance that emerges is heterogeneous and variegated, and always intertwined with the pragmatic and social aspects of human conduct.
-
-
-
Standard Alphabet for Reducing Unwritten Languages and Foreign Graphic Systems to a Uniform Orthography in European Letters (2nd rev.ed. London, 1863)
Author(s): Richard LepsiusEditor(s): J. Alan KempPublication Date January 1981More LessThis new edition of Carl Richard Lepsius’s Standard Alphabet reproduces the text of the second, enlarged, edition of 1863. The extensive Introduction by J. Alan Kemp places it in its historical setting and provides comments on the phonetic basis for the Alphabet and the notation.
-
-
-
The Standard in South African English and its Social History
Author(s): Len W. Lanham and C.A. MacDonaldPublication Date January 1979More LessThis study of the South African variety of English is an exercise in the sociology of language conducted mainly within the conceptual framework and methodology created by William Labov. It accepts that social process and social structure are reflected in patterns of covariation involving linguistic and social variables, and in attitudes to different varieties of speech within the community. This premise is pursued here in its historical implications: linguistuic evidence in present-day speech patterns of earlier states of the society and of the social, political and cultural changes that have brought about the present state. The second main focus in this volume is directed at the concept of ‘standard variety’, that is the social attributes and functions of a formal speech pattern for which the status of standard might be claimed.
-
-
-
Standard Languages and Multilingualism in European History
Editor(s): Matthias Hüning, Ulrike Vogl and Olivier MolinerPublication Date May 2012More LessThis volume explores the roots of Europe's struggle with multilingualism. It argues that, over the centuries, the pursuit of linguistic homogeneity has become a central aspect of the mindset of Europeans. In its extreme form, it became manifest in the principle of 'one language, one state, one people'. Consequently, multilingualism came to be viewed as an undesirable aberration. The authors of this volume approach the relationship between standard languages and multilingualism from a historical, cross-European perspective. They provide a comprehensive overview of the emergence of a standard language ideology and its intricate relationship with matters of ethnicity, territorial unity and social mobility. They explain for different European language areas in what ways the emergence of standard languages had an impact on multilingual policies and practices. Its comparative approach makes this volume an important resource for linguists, researchers from different philologies and social historians.
-
-
-
Standardization
Editor(s): Andrew R. Linn and Nicola McLellandPublication Date December 2002More LessThis volume presents fourteen case studies of standardization processes in eleven different Germanic languages. Together, the contributions confront problematic issues in standardization which will be of interest to sociolinguists, as well as to historical linguists from all language disciplines. The papers cover a historical range from the Middle Ages to the present and a geographical range from South Africa to Iceland, but all fall into one of the following categories: 1) shaping and diffusing a standard language; 2) the relationship between standard and identity; 3) non-standardization, de-standardization and re-standardization.
-
-
-
Standards and Variation in Urban Speech
Author(s): Ronald K.S. MacaulayPublication Date July 1997More LessStandards and Variation in Urban Speech is an examination and exploration of the aims and methods of sociolinguistic investigation, based on studies of Scottish urban speech. It criticially examines the implications of the notions ‘vernacular’, ‘standard language’, ‘Received Pronunciation’, ‘social class’, and ‘linguistic insecurity’. Through a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods using examples from comedians’ jokes, dialect poetry, formal and informal interviews, and personal narratives, the work illustrates the actual norms that speakers exemplify in various ways.
-
-
-
Starting Over – The Language Development in Internationally-Adopted Children
Editor(s): Fred Genesee and Audrey DelcenseriePublication Date March 2016More LessInternationally-adopted children are a unique population of language learners. They discontinue acquisition of their birth language when they are adopted by families that speak other languages. Their unique language learning history raises important practical, clinical and theoretical issues. Practically speaking: what is the typical language learning trajectory of these children after adoption and what factors affect their language learning: age at adoption, country of origin, quality and nature of the pre-adoption learning environment, and others. They also raise important theoretical questions: How resilient is their socio-emotional, cognitive and language development following adoption? Does their language development resemble that of first or second language learners, or something else? Do they experience total attrition of their birth language? Are there neuro-cognitive traces of the birth language after adoption and what neuro-cognitive processes underlie acquisition and processing of the adopted language; are they the same as those of monolingual native speakers or those of early second language learners? And, how do we interpret differences, if any, between adopted and non-adoptive children? Chapters in this volume by leading researchers review research and provide insights on these issues.
-
-
-
Stative Inquiries
Author(s): Alfredo García-PardoPublication Date November 2020More LessThis monograph studies stative predicates from a neo-constructionist perspective and integrates them in a comprehensive theory of event and argument structure. It focuses on two sets of stative verbs: govern-type verbs and object experiencer psychological verbs. For govern-verbs, it shows how notions such as causativity and resultativity can also be ingredients of stative predicates and be derived syntactically. The consequences of this proposal are further pursued in a crosslinguistic investigation of adjectival passives, which are stative predicates of sorts. For object-experiencer psychological verbs, it is shown that their Experiencer theta-role can and should be derived as an aspectual entailment mediated by prepositional structure. In defending this view, this monograph reveals a syntactic parallelism between location verbs and object-experiencer psychological verbs in many languages that has hitherto gone unnoticed. This book will primarily appeal to researchers interested in lexical aspect and its connection to morphosyntax.
-
-
-
Status and Power in Verbal Interaction
Author(s): Julie DiamondPublication Date March 1996More LessStatus and Power in Verbal Interaction is a sociolinguistic study of conversation in a social context. Using an ethnographic methodology and a network analysis of the social roles and relationships in a particular language community, the book explores how speakers negotiate status, relationship, and ultimately contest power through discourse. Of chief concern to the study is how speakers manage to negotiate relationship roles — which here consists of institutional status as well as the more variable social standing — using conversation. Discourse is seen to be not only what people say, but how they say it — how speakers take the floor, bring new topic to the floor, interrupt each other, and become a resource person in a conversation. The study revolves around the idea that power, while intricately tied to social standing and institutional status, is more than the sum of one’s institutional standing, age, education, race and gender. Though these factors convey rank, conversants nonetheless use discourse to jockey for position and contest their relational role vis-a-vis their discourse partners. While institutional standing may be more or less fixed, power of relational roles fluctuates greatly because, as the study shows, power is accorded through a process of ratifying the positive self-image of a speaker. Thus, one’s standing in a group is a community negotiation. By investigating power in community at a micro-level of analysis, this study adds a new dimension to existing understandings of power.
-
-
-
Still More Englishes
Author(s): Manfred GörlachPublication Date May 2002More LessThis monograph comprises eight papers, most of which originated as presentations given at international conferences or guest lectures. These papers deal with the problematic nature of English as a global language, and discuss what makes texts authentic and reliable for linguistic analysis, Scots in Ulster and in Scotland, forms and functions of English in Southeast Asia, the spread of rhyming slang, and varieties of ELT. The volume concludes with an annotated bibliography of the most important publications devoted to varieties of English around the world.
-
-
-
Storied Conflict Talk
Author(s): Katherine A. Stewart and Madeline M. MaxwellPublication Date April 2010More LessNarrative analyses routinely investigate autobiographical and interview data. This book examines narratives-in-interaction co-constructed by participants in formal mediation sessions, by asking how many of the five cases in the videotaped data display the adversarial narrative pattern pervasive within the interpersonal conflict literature, and secondly what other narrative patterns may be present, and how do they work? Focusing simultaneously at the utterance level and the macro-levels present within the larger dispute context, this book reveals situated communicative practices by which interlocutors interactively construct, resist, reproduce, and intertextually transform adversarial narratives to produce outcomes consonant with their underlying interests. In contrast to the dramaturgical model traditionally used in narrative research, this book illuminates the emergent, microgenetic character of narrative development.
-
-
-
The Story of Leander and Hero, by Joan Roís de Corella
Author(s): Joan Rois de CorellaEditor(s): Antonio Cortijo Ocaña and Josep-Lluis MartosPublication Date June 2016More LessJoan Roís de Corella is one of the most renowned authors of fifteenth-century Catalan literature. His Story of Leander and Hero uses a well-known Vergilian and Ovidian motif of unremitting love that turns into tragedy. Corella retells the story adding to it a great dose of suspense and pathos and recasts it in the fashion of sentimental prose, a genre famous at the time and a clear precedent of the great narrative genre to flourish during the Renaissance in the Iberian Peninsula and Europe: the novel.
-
-
-
The Story of Zero
Author(s): T. GivónPublication Date January 2017More LessThe zero coding of referents or other clausal constituents is one of the most natural, communicatively and cognitively-transparent grammatical devices in human language. Together with its functional equivalent, obligatory pronominal agreement, zero is both extremely widespread cross-linguistically and highly frequent in natural text. In the domain of reference, zero represents, somewhat paradoxically, either anaphorically-governed high continuity or cataphorically-governed low topicality. And whether in conjoined/chained or syntactically-subordinate clauses, zero is extremely well-governed, at a level approaching 100% in natural text. The naturalness, cross-language ubiquity and well-governedness of zero have been largely obscured by an approach that, for 30-odd years, has considered it a typological exotica, the so-called "pro-drop" associated with a dubious "non-configurational" language type. The main aim of this book is to reaffirm the naturalness, universality and well-governedness of zero by studying it from four closely related perspectives: (i) cognitive and communicative function; (ii) natural-text distribution; (iii) cross-language typological distribution; and (iv) the diachronic rise of referent coding devices. The latter is particularly central to our understanding the functional interplay between zero anaphora, pronominal agreement and related referent-coding devices.
-
-
-
Storytelling across Japanese Conversational Genre
Editor(s): Polly E. SzatrowskiPublication Date September 2010More LessThis book investigates how Japanese participants accommodate to and make use of genre-specific characteristics to make stories tellable, create interpersonal involvement, negotiate responsibility, and show their personal selves. The analyses of storytelling in casual conversation, animation narratives, television talk shows, survey interviews, and large university lectures focus on participation/participatory framework, topical coherence, involvement, knowledge, the story recipient’s role, prosody and nonverbal behavior. Story tellers across genre are shown to use linguistic/paralinguistic (prosody, reported speech, style shifting, demonstratives, repetition, ellipsis, co-construction, connectives, final particles, onomatopoeia) and nonverbal (gesture, gaze, head nodding) devices to involve their recipients, and recipients also use a multiple of devices (laughter, repetition, responsive forms, posture changes) to shape the development of the stories. Nonverbal behavior proves to be a rich resource and constitutive feature of storytelling across genre. The analyses also shed new light on grammar across genre (ellipsis, demonstratives, clause combining), and illustrate a variety of methods for studying genre.
-
-
-
Storytelling and Drama
Author(s): Hugo BowlesPublication Date January 2010More LessHow do characters tell stories in plays and for what dramatic purpose? This volume provides the first systematic analysis of narrative episodes in drama from an interactional perspective, applying sociolinguistic theories of narrative and insights from conversation analysis to literary dialogue. The aim of the book is to show how narration can become drama and how analysis of the way a character tells a story can be the key to understanding its role in the unfolding action. The book’s interactional approach, which analyses the way in which the characteristic features of everyday conversational stories are used by dramatists to create literary effects, offers an additional tool for dramatic criticism. The book should be of interest to scholars and students of narrative research, conversation and discourse analysis, stylistics, dramatic discourse and theatre studies. Winner of 2012 Esse Book Award for Language and Linguistics
-
-
-
Storytelling in the Digital World
Editor(s): Anna De Fina and Sabina PerrinoPublication Date June 2019More LessStorytelling in the Digital World explores new, emerging narrative practices as they are enacted on digital platforms such as Amazon, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. Contributors’ online ethnographies investigate a wide range of themes including the nature of processes of transformation and recontextualization of offline events into digital narratives; the effects of digital anonymity and pseudonymity on narrative practices; the strategies through which virtual communities discursively work together to solidify and negotiate their sociocultural identities; the tensions between the affordances that characterize different online media and the communicative needs of users; the structures and modes in which virtual users construct and enact participatory practices in these environments; and the significance of different spatiotemporal dimensions in the encoding, sharing and appreciation of stories. More generally, the volume engages with some of the theoretical and methodological challenges that the growing presence of digital technologies and media poses to narrative analysis.
Originally published as special issue of Narrative Inquiry 27:2 (2017)
-
-
-
Strategic Maneuvering for Political Change
Author(s): Ahmed Abdulhameed OmarPublication Date February 2019More LessIn Strategic Maneuvering for Political Change, the author analyzes five political columns written before 2011 by Al Aswany, a prominent Egyptian novelist, using the lens of the extended pragma-dialectical theory of argumentation. What these texts have in common is the use of narrative, fictional and semi-literary techniques to strategically maneuver in supporting the feasibility of political change. It is a contribution to explain how an anti-regime writer paved the way to the Arab Spring in Egypt, and thus goes against a common opinion that the Arab Spring in Egypt was fortuitous or a wholly social-media-based movement.
This monograph is an attempt to help argumentation theorists, linguists, analysts of narratives, and political scientists better understand and evaluate how fiction and narration can be effective means of persuasion in the domain of political communication. It therefore reconsiders the non-straightforward and artistic variants of the language of politics.
-