In:(Im)politeness and Moral Order in Online Interactions
Edited by Chaoqun Xie
[Benjamins Current Topics 107] 2020
► pp. 1–10
(Im)politeness, morality and the internet
Published online: 4 June 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.107.ip.00010.xie
https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.107.ip.00010.xie
Abstract
Much recent research has contributed to the emergence of a moral turn in (im)politeness scholarship, further
confirming the evaluative nature of (im)politeness and the moral basis of (im)politeness evaluations, and further illuminating, among
other things, what is really at work when (im)politeness evaluations take place, what the moral order consists of and how the moral order
influences (im)politeness evaluations. Meanwhile, thanks to much emphasis on the instrumentality of words and utterances, a distinction
can be discerned between ‘politeness without’ (or practical politeness) and ‘politeness within’ (or true politeness). Politeness within is
true and truthful, but politeness without is not necessarily so. True politeness may be in when self is out. This volume aims to further
foreground the link between (im)politeness and morality in people’s online interactions, revealing something about ourselves and about our
life-worlds.
Article outline
- 1.A moral turn in (im)politeness studies?
- 2.(Im)politeness and morality
- 3.The volume: When (im)politeness and morality meet on the internet
Acknowledgements Notes References
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