Twentieth-Century Drama Dialogue as Ordinary Talk: Speaking Between the LinesRoutledge, 5. 12. 2016 - Počet stran: 152 In this book, Susan Mandala offers a series of in-depth investigations into how the dialogue of four modern plays 'works' with respect to the pragmatic and discoursal norms postulated for ordinary conversation. After an account of the often-heated debates between linguists and critics concerning the analysis of drama dialogue as talk, four plays are considered: Harold Pinter's The Homecoming, Arnold Wesker's Roots, Terence Rattigan's In Praise of Love, and Alan Ayckbourn's Just Between Ourselves. For readers unfamiliar with linguistic approaches to talk, a chapter outlining the major frameworks used in the analysis of the plays is also included. By considering both linguistic and literary perspectives, this book extends the boundaries of traditional criticism and shows how the linguistic study of conversation can contribute to our understanding of dramatic dialogue. |
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Strana 1878
... suggest that a detailed analysis of authorial technique and stylistic features can be more successfully achieved within a rigorous linguistic framework ' , but not without first noting that ' evaluation and interpretation is the ...
... suggest that a detailed analysis of authorial technique and stylistic features can be more successfully achieved within a rigorous linguistic framework ' , but not without first noting that ' evaluation and interpretation is the ...
Strana 1882
... suggest that Beatie, the main character in Roots, does not own her own utterances until the end of the play. In contrast, my interpretation of Roots, which draws on variation in English, is very different. What Coulthard (1977/1985: 179) ...
... suggest that Beatie, the main character in Roots, does not own her own utterances until the end of the play. In contrast, my interpretation of Roots, which draws on variation in English, is very different. What Coulthard (1977/1985: 179) ...
Strana 1886
... suggest that he is not alone. In his study of Arden, Osborne, Pinter and Wesker, Brown (1972) acknowledges that he proceeds largely by 'imagin[ing] the plays as in performance' (14). Wallis and Shepherd (1998: 2–3) have similarly noted ...
... suggest that he is not alone. In his study of Arden, Osborne, Pinter and Wesker, Brown (1972) acknowledges that he proceeds largely by 'imagin[ing] the plays as in performance' (14). Wallis and Shepherd (1998: 2–3) have similarly noted ...
Strana 1889
... suggests that these are notable because readers and audiences do not expect ' such specialized language ' ( 1992 : 60 ) from these characters . She suggests that Pinter has ' immaculate control ' of jargon , and ' echoes with precision ...
... suggests that these are notable because readers and audiences do not expect ' such specialized language ' ( 1992 : 60 ) from these characters . She suggests that Pinter has ' immaculate control ' of jargon , and ' echoes with precision ...
Strana 1897
... suggests that stage and screen dialogue present ' spoken prose ' , which is ' far more different from conversation than is usually realized ' ( 1963/1965 : 3 ) . He goes on to warn us that we must not go to novels , plays and films for ...
... suggests that stage and screen dialogue present ' spoken prose ' , which is ' far more different from conversation than is usually realized ' ( 1963/1965 : 3 ) . He goes on to warn us that we must not go to novels , plays and films for ...
Obsah
Approaches to Talk | 1914 |
The The Language | 1944 |
Language and Social Class in Arnold Weskers Roots | 1986 |
Understanding What Is Not Said | |
Alan Ayckbourns Just Between | |
Conclusion | |
Index | |
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Twentieth-century Drama Dialogue as Ordinary Talk: Speaking Between the Lines Susan Mandala Zobrazení fragmentů - 2007 |
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
Alan Ayckbourn Arnold Arnold Wesker audience Beatie Beatie's behaviour Brown and Levinson Bryants Cambridge University Press Caretaker Carter Casebook Challenge Chapter characters chess game cited conversation analysis Coulthard critics Dennis Dennis's dialect discourse analysis discussion Dornan drama dialogue Dukore duologue Elicitations English Esslin example filled pauses flouts Grice Harold Pinter hearer Herman Holt Homecoming illocutionary act illocutionary force implicature initiating interaction interlocutors interpretation issues Joey language Lenny Lenny’s linguistic literature London look Lydia Malkin Mark maxim metaphor move Neil Norfolk Norfolk dialect notes notice observe off-record ordinary talk performance Pinter's dialogue play playwright politeness positive Praise of Love prospect Queen's gambit declined question Quigley Quigley’s Rattigan Rebellato 2001 relevant Request for Action response Ronnie Ronnie's Roots Routledge Rusinko Ruth Ruth's Schegloff Sebastian sequence speaker speech act structure stylistics suggests Taylor Teddy Terence Rattigan Toolan Tsui turn-taking turns typically utterance Wesker Wilcher York