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Pragmatic Variation in First and Second Language Contexts

Methodological issues

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ISBN 9789027218728 | EUR 99.00 | USD 149.00
 
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Departing from Schneider and Barron (2008), representing the emerging field of Variational Pragmatics, this volume examines pragmatic variation focusing on methods utilized to collect and analyze data in a variety of first (L1) and second (L2) language contexts. The objectives are to: (1) examine variation in such areas of pragmatics as speech acts, conventional expressions, metapragmatics, stance, frames, mitigation, communicative action, (im)politeness, and implicature; and (2) critically review central methodological concerns relevant for research in pragmatic variation, such as coding, ethical issues, qualitative and quantitative methods, and individual variation. Theoretical frameworks vary from variationist and interactional sociolinguistics, to variational pragmatics. This collection contains eleven chapters by leading scholars, including two state-of-the art chapters on key methodological issues of pragmatic variation study. Given the theoretical perspectives, methodological focus, and analyses, the book will be of interest to those who study pragmatics, discourse analysis, second language acquisition, sociolinguistics, corpus linguistics, and language variation.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 22 August 2012
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“Recent years have seen an upsurge of interest in pragmatic variation in the first language setting. This volume very admiringly furthers the empirical basis and the theoretical and methodological discussion on this setting, while also taking up the investigation of pragmatic variation in the second language context. Taken together, the book offers many new and captivating insights, thoughts and ideas on pragmatic variation. It is a must-read for pragmatists, sociolinguists and second language researchers researching in the area.”
“Drawing on an impressive array of research methods, the 12 experts in this remarkable book push the fields of Pragmatics and Sociolinguistics in directions both qualitative and quantitative. How? In Pragmatics, the speaker is often depicted as fully rational yet living in an asocial world where the only tasks of communication are cognitive. Speakers deliberately select from sets of linguistic resources, obeying perceived discourse and listener-based constraints so as to best produce intended responses in the listener. If deliberate, no statistical variation should occur. Also, the listener as active socially-situated participant in negotiations of meaning is only vaguely present. Two issues emerge: the social listener as meaning maker and variation either of different forms to create similar meanings or of differing meanings mapped to similar forms. By pushing in these directions, the researchers here creatively push the envelope not only of Pragmatics but also of Variationist Sociolinguistics.”
Cited by (12)

Cited by 12 other publications

Al-Ghamdi, Mohammad Ali
2025. Pragmatic Functions of Insha’Allah and Masha’Allah in Saudi Arabian Dialects: A Comparative Study of Hijazi and Ghamdi Varieties. International Journal of English Language and Linguistics Research 13:2  pp. 50 ff. DOI logo
Visconte, Piero
2025. El code-switching is hitting la aldea. In Spanish Sociolinguistics in the 21st Century [Issues in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics, 42],  pp. 68 ff. DOI logo
Dixon, Tülay & Daniel H. Dixon
2024. A simple methodology for identifying speech act tendencies. Applied Pragmatics 6:1  pp. 60 ff. DOI logo
Xiao-Desai, Yang & Ka F. Wong
2024. Heritage learner pragmatics. Applied Pragmatics 6:2  pp. 147 ff. DOI logo
Barron, Anne
2023. Irish English and Variational Pragmatics. In The Oxford Handbook of Irish English,  pp. 400 ff. DOI logo
Derakhshan, Ali & Farzaneh Shakki
2023. Overview of the Theoretical Frameworks. In Instructed Second Language Pragmatics for The Speech Acts of Request, Apology, and Refusal: A Meta-Analysis [Second Language Learning and Teaching, ],  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Grein, Marion
2018. Progress in language teaching. In From Pragmatics to Dialogue [Dialogue Studies, 31],  pp. 61 ff. DOI logo
Sydorenko, Tetyana, Phoebe Daurio & Steven L. Thorne
2018. Refining pragmatically-appropriate oral communication via computer-simulated conversations. Computer Assisted Language Learning 31:1-2  pp. 157 ff. DOI logo
Beeching, Kate & Helen Woodfield
2015. Introduction. In Researching Sociopragmatic Variability,  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Kroll, Judith F., Paola E. Dussias, Kinsey Bice & Lauren Perrotti
2015. Bilingualism, Mind, and Brain. Annual Review of Linguistics 1:1  pp. 377 ff. DOI logo
Blyth, Carl S. & Dale Koike
2014. Interactional frames and grammatical constructions. In Perspectives on Linguistic Structure and Context [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 244],  pp. 87 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2013. Publications Received. Language in Society 42:2  pp. 237 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 30 march 2026. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.

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