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Pragmatics and Its Applications to Tesol and Sla / (Record no. 16774)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 07382nam a22003255i 4500
001 - CONTROL NUMBER
control field 21835545
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
control field 20220420155352.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
fixed length control field 201209s2021 nju 000 0 eng
010 ## - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CONTROL NUMBER
LC control number 2020951765
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 9781119554257
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
Original cataloging agency DLC
Language of cataloging eng
Description conventions rda
Transcribing agency DLC
042 ## - AUTHENTICATION CODE
Authentication code pcc
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Edition number 2021
Classification number DC 401.25
Item number At815
100 1# - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Attardo, Salvatore,
Relator term author.
9 (RLIN) 44858
245 10 - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Pragmatics and Its Applications to Tesol and Sla /
Statement of responsibility, etc. Salvatore Attardo, Lucy Pickering.
250 ## - EDITION STATEMENT
Edition statement 1.
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Place of publication, distribution, etc. Hoboken :
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. John Wiley & Sons,
Date of publication, distribution, etc. ©2021.
263 ## - PROJECTED PUBLICATION DATE
Projected publication date 2102
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent xix, 243 pages:
Other physical details illustrations;
Dimensions 25 cm.
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note List of Tables xi List of Figures xiii Preface xv Typographical Conventions xix 1 Meaning 1 1.1 What Do We Mean By Meaning? 2 1.1.1 Semiotics 2 1.1.2 Extensional and Intensional Semantics 4 1.1.3 Language in Context 8 1.1.4 The Semantics/Pragmatics Boundary 9 1.1.5 Modularity 10 1.2 A Real Life Application 13 1.3 Conclusion 14 2 The Language Teaching and Pragmatics Interface 15 2.1 Are There Universals in Pragmatics That Students Can Bring To Their L2? 16 2.2 What Do Learners Typically Transfer From Their L1? 17 2.3 Can Pragmatics Be Taught Through Instruction? 19 2.4 Is There a Developmental Path for Pragmatics? 20 2.5 Is Acquisition of Pragmatics Different for L2 Child and Adult Learners? 21 2.6 Does the Learner Have To Sound Exactly the Same As a Native Speaker? 22 2.7 Can Pragmatics Be Assessed in the Classroom? 22 2.8 Conclusion 23 3 Speech Acts 23 3.1 Ordinary Language Philosophy, Oxford, and Austin 24 3.1.1 Austin and Performativity 26 3.1.2 Speech Acts, Searle 27 3.1.3 Realization Patterns 29 3.1.4 How Speech Acts Work 29 3.1.5 Indirect Speech Acts 32 3.1.6 Public Commitment for Speech Acts 33 3.2 Conclusion 35 3.3 Speech Acts in SLA and Applications to TESOL 35 3.3.1 Speech Acts in the TESOL Classroom: Materials 37 3.3.2 Sample Teaching Materials 39 4 Grice's Principle of Cooperation 41 4.1 Gricean Pragmatics as Rational Cooperation 41 4.1.1 Conversational Cooperation Is Rational 42 4.1.2 Implicatures 43 4.1.3 Scalarity and Implicatures 45 4.1.4 Flouting and Implicatures 46 4.1.5 Difference between Inferences, Presuppositions, and Implicatures 48 4.1.6 Developments of Grice's Theory 49 4.1.7 Modularity in Light of Gricean Pragmatics 55 4.2 Conclusion 56 4.3 Applications to SLA 56 4.3.1 Grice in SLA 56 4.3.2 Relevance Theory and SLA 59 4.3.3 TESOL Classroom Materials 61 4.3.4 Sample Teaching Materials 62 5 Politeness 64 5.1 Theories of Politeness 64 5.1.1 Classical Politeness Theories 65 5.1.2 Second Wave Approaches (1990 and forward) 70 5.1.3 Third Wave Theories: Ritualization and Norm 76 5.1.4 Universality of Politeness 78 5.1.5 Sociopragmatics and Power 80 5.2 Conclusion 81 5.3 Politeness and SLA 81 5.3.1 Politeness in the TESOL Materials 84 5.3.2 Sample Teaching Materials 85 6 Functional Sentence Perspective 87 6.1 Theoretical Background 87 6.1.1 Functionalism 87 6.1.2 Markedness 89 6.1.3 Word Order 90 6.1.4 Prominence 92 6.2 Aspects of FSP 92 6.2.1 Newness 93 6.2.2 Known-ness 94 6.2.3 Definiteness 95 6.3 Applications of FSP 97 6.3.1 FSP Reflects the Organization of Ideas in the Mind 97 6.3.2 Paragraph and Textual Organization 98 6.3.3 Marked Constructions 98 6.4 History and Terminology 101 6.4.1 The Prague School 101 6.4.2 European Functionalism 102 6.4.3 Generative Functionalism 103 6.4.4 West Coast Functionalism 105 6.5 Conclusion 105 6.6 FSP in SLA and the TESOL Classroom 105 6.6.1 FSP in SLA 105 6.6.2 FSP in TESOL 106 6.6.3 Sample Teaching Materials 107 7 Stance, Deixis, and Pragmatic markers 110 7.1 Modality 111 7.1.1 Modal Verbs 111 7.1.2 Epistemic and Deontic modality 113 7.2 Deixis 114 7.2.1 Place and Time deixis 115 7.2.2 Discourse Deixis 115 7.2.3 Social Deixis 116 7.3 Pragmatic Markers 116 7.3.1 Schiffrin's Discourse Markers 117 7.3.2 Procedural Information Markers 119 7.3.3 Connectors 119 7.4 Stance 120 7.5 Corpus-assisted Work 123 7.6 Conclusion 125 7.7 Pragmatic Markers in SLA and TESOL 126 7.7.1 Contrastive and Intercultural Studies in SLA and TESOL 126 7.7.2 Sample Teaching Materials 128 8 Interactional Sociolinguistics 130 8.1 The California Milieu 130 8.1.1 The Sociological/Phenomenological Approach 131 8.1.2 Conversation Analysis 134 8.2 Communicative Competence 135 8.3 The Definition of Context 136 8.3.1 Context 136 8.3.2 Communicative Practices 138 8.3.3 Conversational Inferences 139 8.3.4 Contextualization 140 8.4 Conclusion: Gumperz's Interactionism 146 8.5 Sociocultural Interaction and SLA 147 8.5.1 Interactional Sociolinguistics in the TESOL Classroom 151 8.5.2 Sample Teaching Materials 151 9 Data Collection and Research Design in Studies of L2 Pragmatics 153 9.1 Discourse Completion Tasks 153 9.2 Interactional Studies 156 9.2.1 Follow Up Interviews 157 9.3 Pseudolongitudinal 158 9.4 Longitudinal 158 9.4.1 Study Abroad 159 9.5 Computer Mediated Communication 160 9.6 Action Research 161 9.6.1 Student-collected Research 162 9.7 Conclusion 164 10 Metapragmatics 165 10.1 Metalanguage and Object Language 165 10.1.1 The Origins of the Language/Metalanguage Distinction 165 10.1.2 Uses of Metalanguage in Linguistics 167 10.1.3 Metadiscourse 168 10.2 Deixis, Indexicality, and the Semiotic Turn in Sociolinguistics 169 10.2.1 Deixis 169 10.2.2 Indexicality 170 10.2.3 The Semiotic Turn in Sociolinguistics 172 10.3 Metalinguistic Awareness 174 10.3.1 Implicit and Explicit Awareness 175 10.4 Ideology, or the Lack of Awareness 175 10.4.1 Definition of Ideology 175 10.5 Conclusion 180 11 Frontier 181 11.1 Pragmatic Resources in English as a Lingua Franca 181 11.2 Multilingualism 182 11.3 Embodied Cognition 185 11.4 Complexity Theory 186 11.4.1 Complex Systems 186 11.4.2 Applications to Linguistics 188 11.5 Cyberpragmatics 189 11.6 Neuropragmatics 191 11.6.1 Lateralization and Specialization 193 11.6.2 The Theory of Mind 194 11.6.3 Pragmatic Disorders 195 11.7 Conclusion 196 Bibliography 198 Name Index 229 Subject Index 239
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC.
Summary, etc. "This book started out as a series of guest lectures that Attardo delivered in Pickering's Pragmatics and SLA class on Grice, speech-act theory, and presuppositions. We had both taught separately courses on pragmatics, Pickering on the SLA and TESOL connections, Attardo on "Theoretical Pragmatics." Since we were both unhappy with the options for textbooks at the graduate level, besides the venerable Levinson (1983), now almost 40 years old, we started talking about turning the lectures into a book that would be both an introduction to pragmatics and a book about its applications to SLA and TESOL. For obvious pedagogical reasons the discussion of theoretical pragmatics precedes its applications to SLA/TESOL. However, we want to be very clear that the book was built exactly the other way around: we started from the applications to SLA/TESOL and then proceeded to determine exactly what the students needed to know about the theory in order to understand the discussion of the SLA/TESOL applications of pragmatics"--
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element Pragmatics.
9 (RLIN) 44859
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element Second language acquisition.
9 (RLIN) 44860
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element English language -- Study and teaching -- Foreigh speakers
9 (RLIN) 44861
700 1# - ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Pickering, Lucy,
Relator term author.
9 (RLIN) 44862
365 ## - TRADE PRICE
Price amount 4,046.00
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906 ## - LOCAL DATA ELEMENT F, LDF (RLIN)
a 0
b ibc
c orignew
d 2
e epcn
f 20
g y-gencatlg
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
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    Dewey Decimal Classification     Circulation UM Digos College - LIC UM Digos College - LIC Book Cart 02/10/2022 Purchased 4046.00   DC 401.25 At815 2021 26374 05/15/2025 1 04/01/2022 Circulation