Review: The Bloomsbury Companion to Discourse Analysis

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EDITOR: Ken  Hyland
EDITOR: Brian  Paltridge
TITLE: The Bloomsbury Companion to Discourse Analysis
SERIES TITLE: Bloomsbury Companions
PUBLISHER: Bloomsbury Publishing (formerly The Continuum International Publishing Group)
YEAR: 2013

REVIEWER: Inas Youssef Mahfouz, American University of Kuwait

SUMMARY

This book belongs to the Bloomsbury Companions series. It is a panoptic
textbook that provides an overview of discourse analysis. The book consists of
an introduction by the editors and two equal parts. “Part I: Methods of
Analysis in Discourse Research” comprises nine chapters covering the main
theoretical approaches and issues involved in discourse analysis. “Part II:
Research Areas and New Directions in Discourse Research” comprises twelve
chapters that cover different practical directions in discourse analysis.

The book begins with a short introduction where the editors define discourse
as ”an overloaded term, covering a wide range of meanings” (1) and discuss
how discourse analysis has developed quickly over the past decades. Finally,
they describe the subsequent chapters of the book and their purposes.

The first chapter, ”Data collection and transcription in discourse analysis”
by Rodney H. Jones, focuses on the collection and transcription of data from
spoken interactions. Data collection and transcription are regarded as
cultural practices that have changed over the years as a result of the
development of several tools such as tape recorders, video cameras and
computers. The chapter ends with an emphasis on observing ethical issues of
data collection and transcription.

Data collection is typically followed by analysis and this is the topic of
Chapter two, ”Conversation Analysis”. In this chapter Sue Wilkinson and
Celia Kitzinger explore the six features of conversation or
talk-­in­-interaction, namely: “turn­-taking, action formation, sequence
organization, repair, word selection and the overall structural organization
of talk” (p. 25). Then the chapter concentrates on turn­-taking systems to
illustrate that regardless of the accumulated research on conversation
analysis, much investigation is still needed.

In Chapter three, ”Critical discourse analysis”, Ruth Wodak traces the
development of the different approaches to critical discourse analysis (CDA)
and their similarities and differences. Wodak ends the chapter pinpointing the
cornerstones of CDA, namely its reliance on diverse techniques, use of
existing data, and emphasis on applying linguistic expertise to solving
problems.

In ”Genre Analysis”, Chapter four, Christine M. Tardy investigates theory
and research in genre analysis. Tardy focuses on grant proposals and analyzes
20 successful proposals to shed light on how rhetorical and linguistic choices
impact a text.

Mike Baynham elaborates on different approaches pertaining to analyzing
narratives in Chapter five, “Narrative Analysis”. Baynham discusses three
approaches to narrative: discourse analysis, conversational analysis, and
linguistic ethnographic approaches. The chapter also provides two case studies
of narrative analysis and ends with some suggestions for future research.

In Chapter six, ”Ethnography and Discourse Analysis”, Dwight Atkinson,
Hanako Okada and Steven Talmy investigate the complementarity between
ethnographic research and discourse analysis. They show how ethnographic
studies have been enriched with the addition of linguistic detail and vice
versa.

In Chapter seven, ”Systemic Functional Linguistics,” J.R. Martin surveys SFL
and its development in Britain and Australia over the past six decades. The
chapter provides a sample study of a magazine extract and pinpoints new
directions to using SFL in discourse analysis at the end.

Chapter eight, ”Multimodal Discourse Analysis”, by Kay L. O’Halloran,
explores multimodal discourse analysis (MDA) as an evolving approach to
discourse analysis. MDA “extends the study of language per se to the study of
language in combination with other resources, such as images, scientific
symbolism, gesture, action, music and sound” (p.120). The chapter discusses
different approaches to MDA, theoretical and practical issues involved, and a
sample MDA text analysis.

The first part ends with a chapter on “Corpus Approaches to the Analysis of
Discourse.” In this chapter, Bethany Gray and Douglas Biber preview the use of
corpora to analyze language. The authors end their chapter with an emphasis on
the new insights about language that corpus-based analysis can bring.

Part II, ”Research Areas and New Directions in Discourse Research,” provides
practical illustration which complements the theoretical foundation provided
in Part I. This part includes 12 chapters about a wide variety of issues.

The first chapter in this part, Chapter ten, examines types of spoken
discourse and their features. The author, Joan Cutting, pinpoints how certain
social variables such as gender and social class can influence the selection
of features for analysis.

In Chapter 11, Ken Hyland probes into the nature of “Academic Discourse,” its
importance, methods of analyzing it, and the amount of information available
about this type of discourse. The chapter ends with a sample study on
citations to illustrate the ways in which academics interact with their
students and how this interaction is grounded on the repertoires of their
disciplines.

Janet Holmes investigates “Discourse in the Workplace” in Chapter 12. The
chapter focuses on spoken workplace discourse; the author begins by discussing
current research in three categories: types, power and solidarity, and gender
and ethnicity. Holmes provides a sample study, which focuses on a senior
manager who enacts leadership to his team and constantly provides directions
while maintaining a consultative style. Holmes ends her chapter with some
pointers for future research.

”Discourse and Gender,” Chapter 13, examines the role of discourse in gender
and language research. Paul Baker skillfully sums up recent research and
analyzes the concept of the ”cougar” (”an emerging identity category used
to describe women who have younger male partners”). The chapter ends with
insights on using discourse to develop the field of language and gender.

Chapters 14, 15, and 16 focus on trends in discourse analysis studies that
appeared towards the end of the twentieth century. Chapter 14 investigates
“News Discourse,” whether written (as in newspapers) or spoken (as in
broadcasted interviews). Furthermore, the author, Martin Montgomery, sheds
some light on considerations of power and ideology in news discourse. In
Chapter 15, ”Discourse and Computer-Mediated Communication”, Julia Davies
tackles online discourse. The chapter adopts a multimodal approach to
analyzing online texts by examining their fabric, nature, and context. John
Olsson focuses on “the interface between language, crime and law, where ‘law’
includes law enforcement, judicial matters, legislation, … and even disputes
which only potentially involve some infraction of the law” (Olsson n.d.) in
chapter 16, ”Forensic Discourse Analysis: A work in progress”. The chapter
discusses the origins of forensic discourse analysis, its focus, and the
structure of forensic discourse. The chapter ends with a clear emphasis on the
cross disciplinary cooperation between linguists and those working in the
legal profession.

The remaining chapters in this part focus on discourse in a variety of
contexts. Tope Omoniyi investigates “Discourse and Identity” in Chapter 17.
The chapter discusses the definition of ‘minority’ and synthesizes current
research in this area. The author ends by emphasizing the impact of
globalization in creating new contextualizations of ‘minority’.

Chapter 18, ”Discourse and Race,” by Angel Lin and Ryuko Kubota, examines
the idea of race in discourse. The authors pinpoint key studies in this field
and provide some pointers for future research.

Jennifer Hammond investigates “Classroom Discourse” in Chapter 19. The author
sheds light on analyses of turns, sequences and meanings in classroom talk
along with the theoretical, methodological, practical issues and procedures
involved. She provides a sample study which describes pedagogical practices
used with ESL students in mainstream schools. The author ends her chapter with
some procedures for future research.

In chapter 20, ”Discourse and Intercultural Communication,” John Corbett
highlights the different approaches to researching intercultural
communication: questionnaires, group interviews and analyses of actual
interaction. The author concludes that all three approaches should be
interwoven together to reach accurate results.

The last chapter of the book, ”Medical Discourse,” by Timothy Halkowski,
investigates the different participants involved in medical discourse, i.e.
doctors, patients, nurses and the role played by each to unravel the how
‘illness-ing’, ‘patient-ing’, and ‘doctor-ing’ may affect interaction. The
chapter concludes with a note on expanding the scope of research on medical
discourse to include how medical teams manage their daily work.

EVALUATION

“The Bloomsbury Companion to Discourse Analysis” is a rich all-encompassing
textbook which succeeds in covering all concepts, movements, and approaches
related to discourse in one invaluable volume. The book includes two parts
with 21 chapters tackling discourse analysis from both theoretical and
practical perspectives. The different theoretical methods of doing discourse
analysis are presented in the first part of the book. The second part of the
book includes 12 chapters that provide practical analyses of the different
theoretical approaches to doing discourse analysis discussed in the first
part. The almost symmetrical structure of the two parts of the book reflects
the meticulous choices editors have made to put this volume in its current
state.

The internal organization of the chapters makes them easy to read and
understand. In part one, each chapter discusses a certain approach to
researching discourse, assumptions underlying it, and the instruments and
tools related to it. Each chapter ends with a short list of key readings for
those who want to expand their knowledge of the approach discussed. In the
second part, each chapter focuses on a key area in discourse analysis and
provides a sample analysis, pointers for future research, as well as a list of
key readings. The topics of the chapters in both parts of the book are varied,
ranging from traditional approaches to discourse analysis such as conversation
analysis, genre analysis, and narrative analysis to nascent approaches such as
multimodal discourse analysis and the analysis of computer-mediated
communication. The editors have also provided a glossary at the end which
gives brief definitions of most of the terms appearing in the book.

Overall, this volume is an invaluable reference for researchers interested in
discourse analysis. The chapters are not only carefully chosen and accurately
organized, but they are also written by experienced scholars. The content,
clarity, logical organization, and expert guidance provided in this volume
make it truly the best ‘companion’ to discourse analysts of all backgrounds.

References:

Olsson, J. (n.d.). ‘What is Forensic Linguistics?’ Retrieved August 25, 2014,
http://thetext.co.uk/docs/what_is.doc

ABOUT THE REVIEWER

ABOUT THE REVIEWER

Inas Y. Mahfouz is an associate professor of Language and Linguistics at Ain
Shams University. Her primary research interests include discourse analysis,
computational linguistics and Systemic Functional Linguistics.

Book: Moore’s Paradox: A Critique of Representationalism

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Schmid, Ulla

Moore’s Paradox

A Critique of Representationalism

Representationalism grasps the meaning and grammar of linguistic expressions in terms of reference; that is, as determined by the respective objects, concepts or states of affairs they are supposed to represent, and by the internal structure of the content they articulate.

As a consequence, the semantic and grammatical properties of linguistic expressions allegedly reflect the constitution of the objects they refer to. Questions concerning the meaning of particular linguistic expressions are supposed to be answerable by investigating the metaphysics of the corresponding phenomena. Accordingly, questions of the meaning of psychological concepts, are turned into questions of the nature of psychological states. Concerned with Moore‘s Paradox, representationalist approaches lead into an investigation of the state of affairs supposedly described by Moore-paradoxical assertions, and thus eventually into investigations concerning the metaphysics of belief.

This book argues that this strategy necessarily yields both a wrong solution to Moore‘s Paradox and an inadequate conception of the meaning of the expression I believe. Turning to the metaphysics of belief is of no use when it comes to understanding either the meaning of the expression ‘I believe’ or the logic of avowals of belief. Instead, it proposes to focus on the role they play in language, the ways in which they are used in practice.

http://www.degruyter.com/view/product/431094

Accelerated Learning

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Scientists have spliced a key human brain gene into mice, that demonstrated accelerated learning as a result.  In the first study designed to assess how partially ‘humanising’ brains of a different species affects key cognitive functions, scientists report that mice carrying Foxp2 – a human gene associated with language – learned new ways to find food in mazes faster than normal mice.

News On Semiosis In Other Species

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Parrot said to “teach” tool use to others

Semiotic sophistication seen in trout-eel hunting partnership

Giant South American river turtles use various calls to coordinate their activities

Book: True Emotions

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Title: True Emotions
Series Title: Consciousness & Emotion Book Series 9

Publication Year: 2014
Publisher: John Benjamins
http://www.benjamins.com/

Book URL: https://benjamins.com/catalog/ceb.9

Author: Mikko Salmela

Electronic: ISBN:  9789027269812 Pages:  Price: Europe EURO 90.00
Electronic: ISBN:  9789027269812 Pages:  Price: U.S. $ 135.00
Electronic: ISBN:  9789027269812 Pages:  Price: U.K. £ 76.00
Hardback: ISBN:  9789027241597 Pages:  Price: U.S. $ 135.00
Hardback: ISBN:  9789027241597 Pages:  Price: U.K. £ 76.00
Hardback: ISBN:  9789027241597 Pages:  Price: Europe EURO 95.40

Abstract:

True Emotions discusses several key problems in emotion research. The question
about the true nature of emotions focuses on the role of cognition in human
emotions at different levels of analysis: functional role, types of processes
and representations, and neural implementation. Truth to the self, or
authenticity, has two meanings, psychological and normative, where the latter
is analyzed as coherence between the evaluative content of an emotion and the
subject’s internally justified beliefs and values. Truth to the world is
argued to be a matter of correct evaluative representation of the emotional
object on the one hand, and the existence of the object, or the actuality or
accurate probability of the represented situation on the other hand. Finally,
authenticity and truth are applied to analyses of the authenticity of
occupational emotions and the constitution of sentimental values,
respectively. Recommended reading for philosophers, psychologists,
sociologists, and gender researchers.

Book: Intersubjectivity and Intersubjectification in Grammar and Discourse

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Title: Intersubjectivity and Intersubjectification in Grammar and
Discourse
Subtitle: Theoretical and descriptive advances
Series Title: Benjamins Current Topics 65

Publication Year: 2014
Publisher: John Benjamins
http://www.benjamins.com/

Book URL: https://benjamins.com/catalog/bct.65

Editor: Lieselotte Brems
Editor: Lobke Ghesquière
Editor: Freek van de Velde

Electronic: ISBN:  9789027269782 Pages:  Price: Europe EURO 85.00
Electronic: ISBN:  9789027269782 Pages:  Price: U.S. $ 128.00
Electronic: ISBN:  9789027269782 Pages:  Price: U.K. £ 71.00
Hardback: ISBN:  9789027242532 Pages:  Price: U.S. $ 128.00
Hardback: ISBN:  9789027242532 Pages:  Price: U.K. £ 71.00
Hardback: ISBN:  9789027242532 Pages:  Price: Europe EURO 90.10

Abstract:

Recent years saw a growing interest in the study of subjectivity, as the
linguistic expression of speaker involvement. Intersubjectivity, defined by
Traugott as “the linguistic expression of a speaker/writer’s attention to the
hearer/reader”, on the other hand, has so far received little explicit
attention in its own right, let alone systematic definition and
operationalization. Intersubjectivity and seemingly related notions such as
interpersonal meaning, appraisal, stance and metadiscourse, frequently appear
in cognitive-functional accounts, as well as historical and more applied
approaches. These domains offer (partly) conflicting uses of
‘intersubjectivity’, differ in the overall scope of the concept and the
phenomena it may cover. This book brings together contributions from a variety
of different approaches, with the aim of disentangling the current web of
intertwined notions of intersubjectivity. Rather than focusing on the
potentially conflicting views, the volume aspires to resolve some of the
conceptual puzzle by cross-fertilization between the different views, and
spark discussion on how to operationalize ‘intersubjectivity’ in linguistic
research. Originally published in English Text Construction 5:1 (2012).

Book: From Gesture in Conversation to Visible Action as Utterance

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Title: From Gesture in Conversation to Visible Action as Utterance
Subtitle: Essays in honor of Adam Kendon
Publication Year: 2014
Publisher: John Benjamins
http://www.benjamins.com/

Book URL: https://benjamins.com/catalog/z.188

Editor: Mandana Seyfeddinipur
Editor: Marianne Gullberg

Electronic: ISBN:  9789027269270 Pages:  Price: Europe EURO 95.00
Electronic: ISBN:  9789027269270 Pages:  Price: U.S. $ 143.00
Electronic: ISBN:  9789027269270 Pages:  Price: U.K. £ 80.00
Hardback: ISBN:  9789027212153 Pages:  Price: U.S. $ 143.00
Hardback: ISBN:  9789027212153 Pages:  Price: U.K. £ 80.00
Hardback: ISBN:  9789027212153 Pages:  Price: Europe EURO 100.70

Abstract:

Language use is fundamentally multimodal. Speakers use their hands to point to
locations, to represent content and to comment on ongoing talk; they position
their bodies to show their orientation and stance in interaction; they use
facial displays to comment on what is being said; and they engage in mutual
gaze to establish intersubjectivity. This volume brings together studies by
leading scholars from several fields on gaze and facial displays, on the
relationship between gestures, sign, and language, on pointing and other
conventionalized forms of manual expression, on gestures and language
evolution, and on gestures in child development. The papers in this collection
honor Adam Kendon whose pioneering work has laid the theoretical and
methodological foundations for contemporary studies of multimodality,
gestures, and utterance visible action.

Functions of Language Vol. 21, No. 2 (2014)

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Publisher:      John Benjamins
http://www.benjamins.com/

Journal Title:  Functions of Language
Volume Number:  21
Issue Number:  2
Issue Date:  2014

Main Text:

2014. iii, 127 pp.

Table of Contents

Articles

Extending the description of process type within the system of transitivity in delicacy based on Levinian verb classes
Christian M.I.M. Matthiessen
139 – 175

Issues in developing unified systems for contextual Field and Mode
Wendy L. Bowcher
176 – 209

That’s absolutely crap, totally rubbish : The use of the intensifiers absolutely and totally in the spoken language of British adults and teenagers
Paloma Núñez Pertejo and Ignacio M. Palacios Martínez
210 – 237

Book reviews

Hansen-Schirra Silvia, Stella Neumann and Erich Steiner (eds.) Cross-Linguistic Corpora for the Study of Translations: Insights from the Language Pair English-German
Reviewed by Bergljot Behrens
239 – 247

Michaela Mahlberg. Corpus Stylistics and Dickens’s Fiction.
Reviewed by Jane Demmen
248 – 258

Elizabeth A. Thomson & William S. Armour (eds.) Systemic Functional Perspectives of Japanese: Descriptions and Applications.
Reviewed by Wendy L. Bowcher
259 – 265

Neanderthal ‘hashtag’ carving found in cave

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The hashtag may be a symbol of modern life, but its origins can be traced back to Neanderthal carvings.

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