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新世纪英语语言文学界面研究丛书:网络语用学:网络语境中的交际 - 中国高校教材图书网
书名: 新世纪英语语言文学界面研究丛书:网络语用学:网络语境中的交际
ISBN:9787544657990 条码:
作者: (西) 弗朗西斯科·尤斯著  相关图书 装订:平装
印次:1-1 开本:16开
定价: ¥80.00  折扣价:¥76.00
折扣:0.95 节省了4元
字数:
出版社: 上海外语教育出版社 页数:
发行编号: 每包册数:
出版日期: 2019-07-01
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内容简介:
‘新世纪英语语言文学界面研究丛书”汇聚了国外近年出版的界面研究的一批典范之作,方法多元,探讨深入,向国内读者呈现了‘原汁原味”的国际界面研究的精华成果。丛书由我国外语界面研究权威熊沐清、董洪川撰写总序。每种分册皆由国内相关领域的知名专家撰写中文导读,内容翔实,分析精辟,为读者提供提纲挈领的评述,从而帮助读者尽快了解各分册的基本脉络、主要内容及其与相关学科、著述之间的纵横关系。相信对界面研究感兴趣的读者一定能从阅读本丛书中获得启迪。



Cyberpragmatics is an analysis of Internet-mediate communication from the Perspective of cognitive pragmatics. It addresses a whole range of interactions that can be found on the Net: the web page, chat rooms, instant messaging, social networking Sites, 3D virtual worlds, blogs, videoconference, e-mail, Twitter, etc. Of special interest is the role of intentions and the quality or interpretations when these Internet- mediated interactions take place, which is often affected by the textual properties of the medium. The book also analyses the pragmatic implications of transferring offline discourses (e.g. printed paper, advertisements) to the screen-framed space of the Net. And although the main framework is cognitive pragmatics, the book also draws from other theories and models in order to build up a better picture of what really happens when people communicate on the Net. This book will interest analysts doing research on computer-mediated communication university students and researchers undergoing post-graduate courses or writing a PhD thesis.

作者简介:
 
章节目录:
目录:
Introduction
CHAPTER 1
Pragmatics, context and relevance
1. Pragmatics and the use of language
2. Sperher and Wilson's relevance theory
2.1 The code model versus the inferential model
2.2 Ostension and intention
2.3 Manifestness. Cognitive environments
2.4 (Non-demonstrative) inference and deduction
2.5 Sources of information in a context
2.6 Relevance: Interest (cognitive effects) vs. processing effort
2.7 Presumption of relevance, principle of relevance
3. Cyberpragmatics
4. Cyberpragmatics, cognition and the Internet

CHAPTER 2
The presentation of self in everyday web use
1. Introduction
2. Discourse and sources of identity
3. The (speech) community
4. The virtual community
4.1 The linguistic essence of the virtual community
4.2 Virtual cognitive environments
5. Towards personal networks of physical-virtual interactions
6. Virtual identity
7. The personal web page
8. The nickname (nick)

CHAPTER 3
Relevance on the web page
1. The web page genre. Intention and manifestness
in the interpretation of a web page
2. Relevance (in information retrieval systems)
3. Relevance in the user who is surfing the Net
3.1 The role of the \"addresser user\" and the role of the \"addressee user\"
3.2 Levels or patterns ofinteractivity
3.3 Availability of information on the Internet and infoxication
3.4 Cognitive effects, mental effort and estimation of relevance
4. Usability: A rdevance-theoretic approach
4.1 Users and interfaces
4.2 Designing for relevance
5. Transferring discourses to the Internet: The printed newspaper
6. Transferring discourses to the Internet: The printed advertisement

CHAPTER 4
Social networks on the Internet: The Web 2.0
1. Blogs
1.1 The blogger's intention
1.2 The blog genre
1.3 The reader's interpretation
1.4 An emphasis on interaction
1.5 Communal bonding through blogs
2. Social networking sites on the Internet
2.1 Definition, attributes and types
2.2 Some theoretical approaches
2.3 Profiles, entries and (mutually) manifest information
2.4 Adjusting the concepts of\"friend\" and \"friendship\" on SNSs
3. The microblog Twitter
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Cognitive effects vs. processing effort
3.3 Interpreting tweets
3.4 Twitter conversations

CHAPTER 5
The virtual conversation
1. Introduction
2. Chat rooms
2.1 Utterance, propositional attitude and audio-visual context
2.2 \"What is important is to be able to talk\"
2.3 Compensating for the loss of the audio channel in chat rooms
2.4 Compensating for the loss of the visual channel in chat rooms
2.5 Oralized written text
2.6 Attitudes and emotions in chat rooms
3. See you on messenger
3.1 Instant messaging compared to other forms of interaction on the Net
3.2 Why use instant messaging?
3.3 The individual versus the group
3.4 Oralized written text in instant messaging
4. Chatting in 3D: Advances, avatars and Second Life
4.1 Terminological explanation
4.2 Identity
4.3 Body
4.4 Verbal interaction
4.5 Nonverbal behaviour
5. Videoconferencing and context accessibility

CHAPTER 6
You've got mail
1. Introduction
2. General characteristics of electronic mail
2.1 The newsgroup
2.2 The e-mail distribution list (Listserv)
3. Electronic mail in the oral/written continuum
3.1 Social dynamics
3.2 Format
3.3 Grammar
3.4 Style
4. Elements of an electronic message
4.1 The (ostensive) call for attention
4.2 The sender
4.3 The addressee
4.4 The e-mail address
4.5 The subject line
4.6 The body of the message
4.7 The signature

CHAPTER 7
Politeness on the Net
1. Introduction
2. Some approaches to the study of politeness
2.1 (In)direct speech acts and politeness
……
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