Article published In: International Journal of Corpus Linguistics
Vol. 25:4 (2020) ► pp.400–425
Speech acts in corpus pragmatics
Making the case for an extended taxonomy
Published online: 17 November 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.19023.wei
https://doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.19023.wei
Abstract
In corpus pragmatics, most of the research into speech acts still tends to be limited to working with the original, highly
abstract, speech-act taxonomies devised by ordinary language philosophers like Austin and Searle. The aim of this article is to illustrate
how the use of such restricted taxonomies may lead to oversimplified or potentially misleading impressions regarding the communicative
functions expressed in spoken interaction, and to demonstrate how a more elaborate taxonomy, the DART taxonomy ( (2018). How to Do Corpus Pragmatics on Pragmatically Annotated Data: Speech Acts and Beyond. John Benjamins. ), may help us gain better insights into the pragmatic strategies that occur in dialogues. To this end,
I will draw on a small sample of dialogues, both from a task-oriented domain and unconstrained interaction, and contrast selected speech-act
categorisations on the basis of Searle’s and the DART taxonomy, demonstrating the advantages that arise from using a more fine-grained
taxonomy to describe complex verbal exchanges.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Speech act taxonomies
- 2.1Austin and Searle’s taxonomies
- 2.2A brief overview of the DART taxonomy
- 3.Methods
- 3.1Description of the data
- 3.2Analysis methodology
- 4.A contrastive analysis of Searle’s and the DART taxonomy
- 4.1Assertives
- 4.2Expressives
- 4.3Directives
- 5.Conclusion
- Note
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[no author supplied]
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