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Stance taking in conversation: From subjectivity to intersubjectivity
Text and Talk, 2006In this paper I argue that stance in discourse is not the transparent linguistic packaging of 'internal states' of knowledge, but rather emerges from dialogic interaction between interlocutors. Thus, stance is more properly viewed from an intersubjective vantage point, rather than being regarded as primarily a subjective dimension of language.
Elise Kärkkäinen
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The organization of gaze and assessments as resources for stance taking
Text and Talk, 2006This paper aims to shed light on the question of how interactants use the concurrent organizations of assessments and three different gaze patterns as resources for stance taking in everyday conversation. The data come from two recordings of everyday conversation. The aim of this paper is two-fold.
Pentti Haddington
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Resonance in conversational second stories: a dialogic resource for stance taking
Text and Talk, 2012AbstractThis study investigates resonance (Du Bois 2003, 2007) in second stories as a method of anchoring the second telling to the previous telling and as a resource of stance taking. It takes a closer look at the exact ways in which second stories are structurally shaped through initial (first) tellings by examining the resonating elements (of the ...
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Phonetic correlates of stance-taking
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2014Stance, or a speaker’s attitudes or opinions about the topic of discussion, has been investigated textually in conversation- and discourse analysis and in computational models, but little work has focused on its acoustic-phonetic properties. This is a difficult problem, given that stance is a complex activity that must be expressed along with several ...
Valerie Freeman +8 more
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A listener’s stance-taking in mediation
Mediation Theory and Practice, 2017This article analyses a highly acrimonious conflict mediation session between a previous romantic couple in order to illustrate how one listening disputant’s embodied stances influence the trajectory of another disputant’s unfolding narrative. For example, even without speaking, the listener’s facial expression and postures serve to refuse the other ...
Matthew Bruce Ingram +1 more
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Stance‐Taking in Heritage Language Writing
The Modern Language Journal, 2021AbstractThis study explored stance‐taking in Chinese heritage language writing. Analysis focused on a prominent stance expression,wo juede‘I think.’ Frequency, function, and formulaic usage ofwo juedewere compared across 3 written Chinese corpora by heritage learners, second language (L2) learners, and native speakers (L1 writers).
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2023
This study examines hateful language directed at women public figures in the Portuguese newspaper section of the NETLANG Corpus (2018–2022), focusing on consistent stancetaking devices of misalignment and opposition from which patterns of gendered hateful discourse derive.
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This study examines hateful language directed at women public figures in the Portuguese newspaper section of the NETLANG Corpus (2018–2022), focusing on consistent stancetaking devices of misalignment and opposition from which patterns of gendered hateful discourse derive.
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Resonance as a resource for stance-taking in narratives
Functions of Language, 2017AbstractThis paper traces the recurrence and manipulation of devices in monologic narrative texts produced by university students based on a semi-structured elicitation. It focuses on a detailed analysis of multiple texts produced by different speaker-writers of Hebrew, to illustrate the function of structural resonance of both clauses and combinations
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Abstract Recent studies on quotatives have shown that they can become stance markers. In the case of English, it has been recognized that speakers index their relationship and attitude toward quotatives and express the general probability of the occurrence of the quote, as seen with forms
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