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Emotive Communication in Japanese

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ISBN 9789027253941 | EUR 110.00 | USD 165.00
 
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It has become well recognized that affective dimensions of language constitute an integral part of the linguistic system. Japanese provides a prime example of the significance of emotivity as it has grammaticalized a wide variety of expressions to communicate affective information. The collected articles demonstrate the rich diversity of emotive communication in Japanese and analyze various expressions with theoretical perspectives that are often independent from Western models. This volume reflects the influence of traditional Japanese scholars for whom examining affective-relational aspects of language has long been a central concern. The authors are also influenced by more recent scholars in Japanese pragmatics such as Susumu Kuno, Akio Kamio, and Senko K. Maynard. They also draw on anthropological notions such as the inside vs. outside dichotomy that have been used to describe Japanese society.
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 151] 2006.  x, 234 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 1 July 2008
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“These nine papers investigate the way emotivity is expressed in Japanese by employing a variety of analytic frameworks as well as using different kinds of data, and together they successfully demonstrate the extent to which affect or emotion is indexed pervasively on lexical, syntactic, as well as on discourse levels in Japanese.”
Cited by (10)

Cited by ten other publications

Ono, Tsuyoshi & Yasuyuki Usuda
2025. The Atypicality of Verb-Final Clauses in Japanese Conversation: Toward a Speaker-Centered Characterization of Japanese Clausal Syntax. Languages 10:12  pp. 302 ff. DOI logo
Feng, Zongxin
2023. Textual Emotivity and Literary (Im)Politeness. In Advancing (Im)politeness Studies [Advances in (Im)politeness Studies, ],  pp. 115 ff. DOI logo
Tanaka, Lidia
2022. Is formality relevant? Japanese tokenshai,eeandun. Pragmatics. Quarterly Publication of the International Pragmatics Association (IPrA)  pp. 191 ff. DOI logo
Sadler, Misumi
2020. Japanese negative suffix nai in conversation: Its formulaicity and intersubjectivity. Discourse Studies 22:4  pp. 460 ff. DOI logo
Sadler, Misumi
2022. Subjective and intersubjective uses of Japanese verbs of cognition in conversation. Pragmatics. Quarterly Publication of the International Pragmatics Association (IPrA)  pp. 109 ff. DOI logo
Narrog, Heiko
2019. Origin and structure of focus concord constructions in Old Japanese – a synthesis. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 4:1 DOI logo
Mori, Junko, Mutsuko Endo Hudson & Yoshiko Matsumoto
2018. Introduction. In Pragmatics of Japanese [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 285],  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Zawiszová, Halina
2018. On ´doing friendship´ in and through talk: Exploring conversational interactions of Japanese young people, DOI logo
Prior, Matthew T.
2016. Introduction. In Emotion in Multilingual Interaction [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 266],  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Shinzato, Rumiko
2014. Subjectivity, intersubjectivity and Japanese grammar. In Usage-based Approaches to Japanese Grammar [Studies in Language Companion Series, 156],  pp. 85 ff. DOI logo

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