Get fulltext from our e-platform

Framing in Interaction
Pragmatic approaches to framing analysis
This volume invites its readers to rethink the linguistic basis for framing analysis by problematizing the existing foundation and presenting eight new pragmatically based framing analyses.
The book challenges the assumption that there is a unilateral, one-to-one relationship between words and frames, such that framing occurs when a language user is exposed to a word that activates a frame.
Conversely, it is assumed that framing emerges in social interaction through a complex interplay between the participants, the semiotic resources employed, the circumstances, and the multiple frames of interaction. This assumption calls for the relationship between words and frames to be analyzed in pragmatics, including in cross-fertilization with other disciplines such as discourse analysis, interaction analysis, sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, and social psychology.
The assumption is operationalized in eight different exemplary framing analyses. Each analysis has its own focus, drawing on its own disciplines, and utilizing its own concepts, tools, and methods.
The results of the analyses are noteworthy and demonstrate how a pragmatic approach to framing analysis can enhance the validity and reliability of the analysis.
The book challenges the assumption that there is a unilateral, one-to-one relationship between words and frames, such that framing occurs when a language user is exposed to a word that activates a frame.
Conversely, it is assumed that framing emerges in social interaction through a complex interplay between the participants, the semiotic resources employed, the circumstances, and the multiple frames of interaction. This assumption calls for the relationship between words and frames to be analyzed in pragmatics, including in cross-fertilization with other disciplines such as discourse analysis, interaction analysis, sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, and social psychology.
The assumption is operationalized in eight different exemplary framing analyses. Each analysis has its own focus, drawing on its own disciplines, and utilizing its own concepts, tools, and methods.
The results of the analyses are noteworthy and demonstrate how a pragmatic approach to framing analysis can enhance the validity and reliability of the analysis.
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 354] 2025. v, 279 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 30 October 2025
Published online on 30 October 2025
© John Benjamins
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1. Framing from a pragmatic point of viewSimon Borchmann, Anne Fabricius and Ida Klitgård | pp. 1–22
- Chapter 2. Framing as interaction: Cooperation, relevance, and information structureSimon Borchmann | pp. 23–75
- Chapter 3. Sustainability reporting in the fossil fuel sector: A linguistic balancing act to reconcile self- and other-framingsTrine Dahl | pp. 76–98
- Chapter 4. Figurative framing in political interaction: War metaphor scenarios in Covid-19 debates, and their integration into conspiracy theoriesAndreas Musolff | pp. 99–124
- Chapter 5. Framing the Danish Prime Minister as communist dictator during COVID-19Ida Klitgård | pp. 125–159
- Chapter 6. Framing and indexicality in parody: Jacob Rees-Mogg’s message to the Common PeopleAnne H. Fabricius | pp. 160–178
- Chapter 7. Framing agency, identity and credibility in court: Closing arguments in Danish rape trialsSune Sønderberg Mortensen and Trine Lizette Djurhuus Glud | pp. 179–212
- Chapter 8. Framing a situated learning experience for migrant workers: Different approaches to digital keying in second language learning resourcesLouise Tranekjær | pp. 213–235
- Chapter 9. Assessing deliberative quality in a debate on Facebook: The role of framingSusanne Kjærbeck and Niels Møller Nielsen | pp. 236–268
- Subject index | pp. 269–279