Discussion published In: Language and Dialogue
Vol. 8:2 (2018) ► pp.306–327
Discussion articles
Dialogism is an integrationism
Reply to Peter Jones
Published online: 12 October 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/ld.00017.lin
https://doi.org/10.1075/ld.00017.lin
Abstract
In Language and Dialogue 8:1 (2018), Peter Jones wrote a critical article dealing with dialogical theory in the
context of language and communication. His article covered several theoretical and methodological frameworks dealing with concepts
of dialogue, here interpreted from the point-of-view of Roy Harris’s integrationism. Edda Weigand (this issue) has written a
comprehensive discussion article which mainly focuses on Pablé, Adrian. 2018. “Abandoning the simple by disintegrating the sign? Semiological reflections on Edda Weigand’s (meta)theory.” Language and Dialogue 8(1): 84–101. and Orman, Jon. 2018. “Theorising the untheorisable? Notes on integrationism and the ‘Mixed-Game Model’.” Language and Dialogue 8(1): 102–117. as well as Harris’s original work. In my present response to Jones I deal
almost exclusively with my own version of “extended dialogism”, which was included among his targets. I argue that extended
dialogism is actually a form of moderate integrationism. I demonstrate that Jones’s contribution has several interesting points,
but that it also contains a number of misguided interpretations.
Keywords: dialogue, dialogism, integrationism, verbal interaction, sense-making, communication
Article outline
- 1.Outline
- 2.Dialogue and interaction, dialogicality and sense-making
- 3.Solo activities as dialogical
- 4.More on the role of language
- 5.Words
- 6.The written language bias in linguistics (WLB)
- 7.The metaphor of dialogue
- 8.The boundaries of dialogism (and integrationism?)
- 9.Variants of dialogism and integrationism
- 10.Extreme integrationism as a sect
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
References
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