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Marxism and the philosophy of language

Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Edited by Ladislav Matejka & I. R. Titunik (1973)

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  1. An alternative strategy for transcultural communication: Dialogic understanding of multiple voices.Eungjun Min - 2001 - World Futures 57 (6):583-597.
    (2001). An alternative strategy for transcultural communication: Dialogic understanding of multiple voices. World Futures: Vol. 57, Future Trends in Communications Strategies, pp. 583-597.
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  • The Dreadful Credibility of Absurd Things: A Tendency in Fantasy Theory.Mark Bould - 2002 - Historical Materialism 10 (4):51-88.
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  • Stalinism, 'Nation Theory' and Scottish History: A Reply to John Foster.Neil Davidson - 2002 - Historical Materialism 10 (3):195-222.
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  • Meaning, Context, and Control:Convergent trends and controversial issues in current Social‐scientific research on Human cognition and communication.Ragnar Rommetveit - 1987 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 30 (1 & 2):77 – 99.
    A survey of a wide range of social?scientific disciplines reveals a definite convergence of theoretical interest in human cognition and communication as situated, concerned, and embedded in social commitment. Recent contributions within situation semantics and cognitive science explicitly reject some of the constraints inherent in their shared philosophical heritage and prepare novel ground for dialogues between fields as far apart as formal semantics and ?dialogical? text theory. Issues such as purely cognitive versus motivational aspects of human situatedness, and the relationship (...)
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  • Meaning in gender theory: Clarifying a basic problem from a linguistic-philosophical perspective.Eva Waniek & Erik Michaeltr Vogt - 2005 - Hypatia 20 (2):48-68.
    : The author investigates the notion of linguistic meaning in gender research. She approaches this basic problem by drawing upon two very different conceptions of language and meaning: (1) that of the logician Gottlob Frege and (2) that of the linguist Ferdinand de Saussure. Motivated by the controversial response the Anglo-American sex/gender debate received within the German context, the author focuses on the connection between this epistemological controversy among feminists and two discursive traditions of linguistic meaning (analytic philosophy and poststructuralism), (...)
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  • Interaction between grammar and multimodal resources: quoting different characters in Korean multiparty conversation.Yujong Park - 2009 - Discourse Studies 11 (1):79-104.
    This article examines the interaction between grammar and multimodal resources by analyzing reported speech in Korean multiparty face-to-face interaction. The operation of two relevancy rules — minimization and recognition in interaction — is examined together with how the absence or presence of grammar is complemented by multimodal resources of various sorts. For the analysis, three categories are posited depending on who the quoted character is in the talk. In quoting oneself or co-participants in the talk, syntactic resources, prosody, sequential organization (...)
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  • Self as an Aesthetic Effect.Antonia Larrain & Andrés Haye - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    Mainstream psychology has assumed a notion of the self that seems to rest on a substantialist notion of the psyche that became predominant despite important critical theories about the self. Although cultural psychology has recognized the diverse, dialogical, historical, narrative and performative nature of self, as opposed to the idea of self as entity, it is not clear how it accounts for the phenomenological experience of self as a unified image. In this paper, we offer a theoretical contribution to developing (...)
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  • Defending Joy against the Popular Revolution: legitimation and delegitimation through songs.Francesco Screti - 2013 - Critical Discourse Studies 10 (2):205-222.
    In this paper, I will analyze, as an example of political discourse, the songs used by Spain's two main political parties in the 2008 general elections. Just like other texts used in political electoral discourse, these songs form a part of a public and ideological discourse aimed at the election of a candidate. The whole of the candidate's discourse is aimed at convincing the electorate that she/he and his/her party are the best choice, while the opposing candidate is the worst. (...)
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  • Capitalising on the plasticity of impartiality: the BBC and the 2009 Gaza appeal.Jiska Engelbert & Patrick McCurdy - 2011 - Critical Discourse Studies 8 (3):183-201.
    This article focuses on the British Broadcasting Corporation's decision to deny a request to air a Disasters Emergency Committee Appeal for Gaza in January 2009. The BBC argued that airing the appeal would threaten its impartiality. Despite the centrality of impartiality to the BBC, the concept's meaning is anything but unequivocal. An exploration of a media offensive, which BBC executives launched in response to public outrage over the decision, seeks to reconstruct what definition of impartiality is inferred by the BBC's (...)
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  • Is it possible to grow an I–Thou relation with an artificial agent? A dialogistic perspective.Stefan Trausan-Matu - 2019 - AI and Society 34 (1):9-17.
    The paper analyzes if it is possible to grow an I–Thou relation in the sense of Martin Buber with an artificial, conversational agent developed with Natural Language Processing techniques. The requirements for such an agent, the possible approaches for the implementation, and their limitations are discussed. The relation of the achievement of this goal with the Turing test is emphasized. Novel perspectives on the I–Thou and I–It relations are introduced according to the sociocultural paradigm and Mikhail Bakhtin’s dialogism, polyphony inter-animation, (...)
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  • Politics and poetics of the body in early modern japan.Katsuya Hirano - 2011 - Modern Intellectual History 8 (3):499-530.
    This essay examines the political implications of Edo (present-day Tokyo) popular culture in early modern Japan by focusing on the interface between distinct forms of literary and visual representation and the configuration of social order (the status hierarchy and the division of labor), as well as moral and ideological discourses that were conducive to the reproduction of the order. Central to the forms of representation in Edo popular culture was the overarching literary and artistic principle, which I call a phrase (...)
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  • Embodied Identity and Political Participation: Squatters' Engagement in the Participatory Budget in Brazil.Ana Paula Pimentel Walker - 2013 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 41 (2):199-222.
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  • Bakhtin's Philosophy and Medical Practice — Toward a Semiotic Theory of Doctor — patient Interaction.Raimo Puustinen - 1999 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 2 (3):275-281.
    Doctor-patient interaction has gained increasing attention among sociologists and linguists during the last few decades. The problem with the studies performed so far, however, has been a lack of a theoretical framework which could bring together the various phenomena observed within medical consultations. Mikhail Bakhtin's philosophy of language offers us tools for studying medical practice as socio-cultural semiotic phenomenon. Applying Bakhtin's ideas of polyphonic, context-dependent and open-ended nature of human communication opens the possibilities to develop prevailing theoretical and empirical approaches (...)
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  • Nailing down an answer: participations of power in trial talk.Gregory Matoesian - 2005 - Discourse Studies 7 (6):733-759.
    This article examines a questioning strategy in trial crossexamination designed to control an evasive witness, and how that control functions through the interactive contours of verbal and visual conduct to index identity, construct multidimensional forms of participation and project intertextual relations. In the process of nailing down an answer, attorney and witness manipulate linguistic ideologies and project participations of power to calibrate the epistemological criteria for determining the legitimacy of legal realities. I demonstrate how indexical iconicities of trial dialogic form (...)
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  • Reported Speech in Chinese Political Discourse.Sai-hua Kuo - 2001 - Discourse Studies 3 (2):181-202.
    Based on video-taped data from five televised 1998 Taipei mayoral debates, this article examines the use of reported speech in Chinese political discourse, with a particular focus on direct quotation. The findings are that direct quotation or constructed dialogue not only creates the rhetorical effect of vividness and immediacy but also establishes interpersonal involvement. More importantly, the three debaters in this study use direct quotation as an indirect strategy for self-promotion and for denigration. Citing someone else's words objectifies debaters' praise (...)
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  • Conceptual frameworks for social and cultural Big Data analytics: Answering the epistemological challenge.Lucy Resnyansky - 2019 - Big Data and Society 6 (1).
    This paper aims to contribute to the development of tools to support an analysis of Big Data as manifestations of social processes and human behaviour. Such a task demands both an understanding of the epistemological challenge posed by the Big Data phenomenon and a critical assessment of the offers and promises coming from the area of Big Data analytics. This paper draws upon the critical social and data scientists’ view on Big Data as an epistemological challenge that stems not only (...)
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  • A Conceptual Framework for Studying Evolutionary Origins of Life-Genres.Sigmund Ongstad - 2019 - Biosemiotics 12 (2):245-266.
    The introduction claims that there might exist an evolutionary bridge from possible genres in nature to human cultural genres. A sub-hypothesis is that basic life-conditions, partly common for animals and humans, in the long run can generate so-called life-genres. To investigate such hypotheses a framework of interrelated key communicational concepts is outlined in the second, main part. Four levels are suggested. Signs are seen as elements in utterances. Further, sufficiently similar utterances can be perceived as kinds of utterances or genres. (...)
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  • Generic characteristics of the Office of the High Representative's press releases.Danijela Majstorović - 2009 - Critical Discourse Studies 6 (3):199-214.
    This study looks into the hybridity of a particular political discourse format by exploring different sets of characteristics of the press release genre published by the Office of the High Representative in Bosnia and Herzegovina between 1996 and 2005. In an integrated approach preceded by a substantial contextualization of the problem, the genre is analyzed in terms of its activity, social relations and communication technology. Particular political communication strategies the genre is meant to accomplish, such as legitimization, coercion and representation, (...)
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  • The Fascist Seduction of Narrative: Walter Benjamin’s Historical Materialism Beyond Counter-Narrative.Tadashi Dozono - 2018 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 37 (5):513-527.
    This essay introduces Walter Benjamin’s historical materialism to illuminate how history teachers may invoke a critique of the past and present through democratizing the production of knowledge in the classroom. Historical materialism gives students access to the means of knowledge production and entrusts them with the task of generating a critique of politics though encounters with historical objects. The rise of the alt-right, alternative facts, and fake news sites necessitates social studies methods that intervene into the fascist seductions of narrative (...)
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  • Flowing and framing: Language ideology, circulation, and authority in a Pentecostal Bible school.Bruno Reinhardt - 2015 - Pragmatics and Society 6 (2):261-287.
    Experiential and mediatized, Pentecostal Christianity is one of the most successful cases of contemporary religious globalization. However, it has often grown and expanded transnationally without clear authoritative contours. That is the case in contemporary Ghana, where Pentecostal claims about charismatic empowerment have fed public anxieties concerning the fake and the occult. This article examines how Pentecostalism’s dysfunctional circulation is countered within seminaries, or Bible schools, by specific strategies of pastoral training. First, I revisit recent debates on Protestant language ideology in (...)
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  • From system into action, from homogeneous to heterogeneous: movements of the founding concepts of dialogism, polyphony and interdiscourse.Michelle Dominguez - 2013 - Bakhtiniana 8 (1):5 - 20.
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  • Discourse and the Materialist Conception of History: Critical Comments on Critical Discourse Analysis.Peter Jones - 2004 - Historical Materialism 12 (1):97-125.
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  • Bakhtin and Freire: Dialogue, dialectic and boundary learning.Peter Rule - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (9):924-942.
    Dialogue is a seminal concept within the work of the Brazilian adult education theorist, Paulo Freire, and the Russian literary critic and philosopher, Mikhail Bakhtin. While there are commonalities in their understanding of dialogue, they differ in their treatment of dialectic. This paper addresses commonalities and dissonances within a Bakhtin-Freire dialogue on the notions of dialogue and dialectic. It then teases out some of the implications for education theory and practice in relation to two South African contexts of learning that (...)
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  • Fuchs, C. (2020). Communication and capitalism: A critical theory. Westminster: University of Westminster Press. 406 pp.Communication and capitalism: A critical theory. [REVIEW]Rafael Grohmann - 2022 - Communications 47 (3):497-500.
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  • Cultures do not exist: Exploding self-evidence in the investigation of Interculturality.Wim van Binsbergen - 1999 - Quest - and African Journal of Philosophy 13 (1-2):37-114.
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  • Can Animals Refer? Meta-Positioning Studies of Animal Semantics.Sigmund Ongstad - 2021 - Biosemiotics 14 (2):433-457.
    This meta-study applies a socio-semiotic framework combining five basic communicational aspects, form, content, act, time, and space, developed to help answering the questionCan animals refer?It further operates with four levels, sign, utterance, genre, and lifeworld, studying relations between utterance and genre in particular. Semantic key terms found in an excerpted ‘resource collection’ consisting of three anthologies, two academic journals, and a monography, studying content in animal communication, are inspected, and discussed, especially information, functional reference, and reference. Since a temporary inspection (...)
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  • KOGAWA, João. Vozes em fragmentos na poesia de Chico: uma arquitetura polifônica? Rio de Janeiro: Editora Multifoco, 2018, 170p. [REVIEW]Anderson Salvaterra Magalhães - 2019 - Bakhtiniana 14 (2):159-165.
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  • Counter-revolutionary art: OBEY and the manufacturing of dissent.Francesco Screti - 2017 - Critical Discourse Studies 14 (4):362-384.
    ABSTRACTIn this paper I critically analyze the work of Shepard Fairey, the street artist better known as OBEY, as a multimodal discourse. After introducing the notion of street art, I analyze Fairey’s aesthetics, inspired in Pop Art and Soviet Constructivism, as well as his accounts on his own art, in order to unveil his ideology. I then discuss a particular case, concerning the pastiche of the Che Guevara’s image. I will show that the seemingly subversive nature of OBEY’s work, is (...)
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  • Bakhtin and the Russian Avant Garde in Vitebsk: Creative understanding and the collective dialogue.E. Jayne White & Michael A. Peters - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (9):922-939.
    This paper locates its genesis in a small town called Vitebsk in Belorussia which experienced a flowering of creativity and artistic energy that led to significant modernist experimentation in the years 1917–1921. Marc Chagall, returning from the October Revolution took up the position of art commissioner and developed an academy of art that became the laboratory for Russian modernism. Chagall’s Academy, Bakhtin’s Circle, and Malevich’s experiments, artistic group UNOVIS—all in fierce dialogue with one another—made the town of Vitebsk into an (...)
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  • Will and communality in Bakhtin, from a Nietzschean perspective.Christiaan Beyers - 2015 - Studies in East European Thought 67 (3):145-164.
    The article engages Bakhtin’s corpus with Nietzschean ideas in order to draw out critical resources for the social theory of ‘community’. It begins by considering both thinkers’ debt to neo-Kantianism, and proceeds to relate the ‘will to power’ to Bakhtin’s early intersubjective phenomenology of intentional acts. This interpretation is then extended to Bakhtin’s conception of art, where aesthetics stands in tensile relation to ethics in the exercise of authorial will. Bakhtin’s later work might be seen as elaborating more complex terms (...)
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  • On bringing Mikhail Bakhtin into the social sciences.Anthony Wall - 2001 - Semiotica 2001 (133).
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  • Hattiangadi's langue- ing and ours.David Mertz - 1989 - Social Epistemology 3 (1):71 – 79.
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  • The dialogical nature of our inner lives.John Shotter - 1998 - Philosophical Explorations 1 (3):185 – 200.
    Classically, we have treated talk of such things as meaning, understanding, and thinking, etc., as raising problems about mental states assumed to exist inside people's heads. And in our philosophical inquiries, we have sought determinate in-principle solutions to these problems. In the dialogical, relational-responsive view of language use presented here — influenced by Wittgenstein, Bakhtin, and Voloshinov — a very different view of such talk is presented. Our 'inner lives' are not hidden 'inside' us, but are 'displayed' out 'in' the (...)
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  • Rereading Durkheim in light of Jewish law: how a traditional rabbinic thought-model shapes his scholarship.Taylor Paige Winfield - 2020 - Theory and Society 49 (4):563-595.
    When studying the work of Émile Durkheim, scholars must consider how his intellectual development in a traditional Jewish environment contributed to and informed his ideas. This article details how Durkheim’s upbringing endowed him with a traditional rabbinic thought-model. The author analyzes five of Durkheim’s major works to argue that the system of classification, language, and style of argument Durkheim used to define concepts in his scholarship mirror streams of rabbinic thought. The article builds off the sociology of knowledge to illuminate (...)
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  • Campo e enunciado: problema da articulação do discurso.Andrés Haye & Antonia Larraín - 2018 - Bakhtiniana 13 (2):79-99.
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  • Bakhtin and the ‘general intellect’.Michael E. Gardiner - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (9):893-908.
    One of the key concepts in autonomist Marxism is the ‘general intellect’. As capitalism develops, labour and its products become increasingly ‘immaterial’, inasmuch as the physical side of production is taken over by automated systems. The result is that all aspects of the collective worker's affective, desiring and cognitive capabilities are now brought to bear on production itself. This problematises capitalistic notions of proprietary control, because it raises the possibility that the mass ‘cognitive worker’, and the inherently co-operative principles it (...)
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  • Interactional Reconstruction in Real‐Time Language Processing.Barbara A. Fox - 1987 - Cognitive Science 11 (3):365-387.
    This study documents and characterizes a phenomenon in naturally‐occurring conversation which I have termed interactional reconstruction. Interactional reconstruction involves retroactive reinterpretation of an earlier utterance (or set of utterances) on the basis of a more recent utterance (or set of utterances). This work is meant to serve two functions: first, to enrich our theories of human communication; and second, to explore directions and implications for theories of meaning and discourse modeling within cognitive science.
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  • The novel: an ethico-political genre from a bakhtinian perspective.Angela Maria Rubel Fanini - 2013 - Bakhtiniana 8 (1):21 - 39.
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  • Learning and education in the global sign network.Susan Petrilli - 2020 - Semiotica 2020 (234):317-420.
    The contribution that may come from the general science of signs, semiotics, to the planning and development of education and learning at all levels, from early schooling through to university education and learning should not be neglected. As Umberto Eco claims in the “Introduction” to the Italian edition of his book Semiotica and Philosophy of Language (1984: xii, my trans.), “[general semiotics] is philosophical in nature, because it does not study a particular system, but posits the general categories in light (...)
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  • The moral discourses of ‘post-crisis’ neoliberalism: a case study of Lithuania’s Labour Code reform.Arunas Juska & Charles Woolfson - 2017 - Critical Discourse Studies 14 (2):132-149.
    ABSTRACTThis article problematizes the neoliberal reconfiguration of labour rights in Lithuania, a newer European Union member state, in which the impacts of the global economic and financial crisis were particularly severe and where radical austerity measures were subsequently imposed. Now, after six years, in an attempt to resolve the exhaustion of previous austerity-based solutions for economic recovery, a new Labour Code is being introduced which will further weaken labour protections and labour rights. This article analyses conflicting positions in current debates (...)
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  • Socialising Epistemic Cognition.Simon Knight & Karen Littleton - forthcoming - Educational Research Review.
    We draw on recent accounts of social epistemology to present a novel account of epistemic cognition that is ‘socialised’. In developing this account we foreground the: normative and pragmatic nature of knowledge claims; functional role that ‘to know’ plays when agents say they ‘know x’; the social context in which such claims occur at a macro level, including disciplinary and cultural context; and the communicative context in which such claims occur, the ways in which individuals and small groups express and (...)
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  • Discursive therapy.Tom Strong & Andy Lock - 2005 - Janus Head 8 (2):585-593.
    We contend that the talk of therapy, like everyday talk, is where and how people construct their understandings and ways of living. This is the fundamental insight of the social constructionist, or discursive, therapies. ‘Meaning’ is not some pre-given ‘thing’ that is communicated more or less successfully from one individual to another. Rather, ‘meanings’ are negotiated or constructed in the process of communication until each party is clear that they have a grasp of what they are ‘talking about’. Similarly, ‘meanings’ (...)
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  • Deconstructing Communication: Derrida and the (Im)possibility of Communication.Briankle G. Chang - 1988 - History of European Ideas 9 (5):553-568.
    The author wishes to thank Professor Larry Grossberg for his helpful comments on an earlier draft of this paper.
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  • Sense and Singularity: Jean-Luc Nancy and the Interruption of Philosophy.Georges Van den Abbeele - 2023 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Philosophical thinking is interrupted by the finitude of what cannot be named, on the one hand, and that within which it is subsumed as one of multiple modes of sense-making, on the other. Sense and Singularity elaborates Jean-Luc Nancy’s philosophical project as an inquiry into the limits or finitude of philosophy itself, where it is interrupted, and as a practice of critical intervention where philosophy serves to interrupt otherwise unquestioned ways of thinking. Nancy’s interruption of philosophy, Van Den Abbeele argues, (...)
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  • How Ideas Come Into Being: Tracing Intertextual Moments in Grades of Objectification and Publicness.Andrea Karsten & Marie-Cécile Bertau - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10:458438.
    How do ideas come into being? Our contribution takes its starting point in an observation we made in empirical data from a prior study. The data center around an instant of an academic writer’s thinking during the revision of a scientific paper. Through a detailed discourse-oriented micro-analysis, we zoom in on the writer’s thinking activity and uncover the genesis of a complex idea through a sequence of interrelated moments. These moments feature different degrees of “crystallization” of the idea; from gestures, (...)
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  • The Politics and the Demographics of Veganism: Notes for a Critical Analysis.Dario Martinelli & Aušra Berkmanienė - 2018 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 31 (3):501-530.
    The present essay aims to offer some reflections concerning the cultural and political aspects of veganism, on the basis of the available surveys and statistics, plus some more gathered by the authors—with the tools of different methodologies, including the semiotic one. After an introduction to veganism as phenomenon and movement, with general reflections and also a number of specific data, the essay proceeds to focus on the more political aspects, with an emphasis on some of the most intriguing and multifaceted (...)
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  • Monologic and Dialogic Styles of Argumentation: A Bakhtinian Analysis of Academic Debates between Mainland China and Taiwan.Tzu-Hsiang Yu & Wei-Chun Wen - 2004 - Argumentation 18 (3):369-379.
    This study applies the concept of reported speech advanced by the renowned Russian literary scholar Mikhail Bakhtin to compare the argumentative styles of Mainland China and Taiwan. These societies in question are considered by many scholars as sharing the same argumentative style. The study reports that the Mainland debaters more frequently than the Taiwanese debaters maintained the authenticity of the quotations cited from ancient Confucian sources, whereas Taiwanese debaters paraphrased more frequently. On the other hand, this difference cannot be found (...)
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  • (1 other version)Slash writers and guinea pigs as models for a scientific multiliteracy.Matthew Weinstein - 2006 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 38 (5):607–623.
    This paper explores alternative approaches to the conception of scientific literacy, drawing on cultural studies and emerging practices in language arts as its framework. The paper reviews historic tensions in the understanding of scientific literacy and then draws on the multiliteracies movement in language arts to suggest a scientific multiliteracy. This is explored through analyzing the writing practices of groups other than scientists who for a variety of reasons must engage science. Specifically the paper examines zine writers who are ‘professional’ (...)
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  • Iconicity as Multimodal, Polysemiotic, and Plurifunctional.Gabrielle Hodge & Lindsay Ferrara - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Investigations of iconicity in language, whereby interactants coordinate meaningful bodily actions to create resemblances, are prevalent across the human communication sciences. However, when it comes to analysing and comparing iconicity across different interactions and modes of communication, it is not always clear we are looking at the same thing. For example, tokens of spoken ideophones and manual depicting actions may both be analysed as iconic forms. Yet spoken ideophones may signal depictive and descriptive qualities via speech, while manual actions may (...)
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  • The Red Gold: analysing a nexus of practices.Inger Lassen - 2008 - Critical Discourse Studies 5 (1):1-19.
    The case study discussed in this article focuses on two communicative events unfolding in connection with trials in Angola of a genetically modified plant designed to detect landmines. The case is based on an independent observer's report and a documentary, The Red Gold, which was broadcast on Danish TV during 2004. I use a nexus analysis approach combined with critical discourse analysis to suggest that intertextuality and discourse interaction across genres influence ideological representations. This point is brought to the fore (...)
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