Description

Book Synopsis

Discourse Analysis provides an essential and practical introduction for students studying modules on the analysis of language in use. It explores the ways in which language is used and organised in written and spoken texts to generate meanings and takes into account the social contexts of production, and the social roles and identities of those involved.

Investigating the ways in which language varies according to subject, social setting, and communicative purpose, this book examines various forms of speaking and writing, including casual conversation, speeches, parliamentary debate, computer-mediated communication, and mass media articles. It discusses topics including how we convey more than we actually say or write, the role of politeness and impoliteness in communication, and what makes texts cohesive and coherent. It also shows how particular aspects of discourse analysis can be assisted by corpus methods and tools.

Taking students through a step-by-step g

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

Figures

Tables

Activities

QR codes

IPA chart

Chapter 1

Discourse: Language, context, and choice

Introduction

What is discourse?

What is discourse analysis?

The nuts and bolts of discourse

Morphology

Phonology

Lexis

Lexical creativity

Graphology

Syntax

Semantics

Discourse

Text

‘Have you sheeted?’ – discussion

Discourse communities

Meaning potential

Understanding context

Expanding context (the role of background knowledge)

Context and relevance

Co-text

Spoken and written discourse

Discourse markers

Standard English (or the issue of convention)

Sociolinguistic Variables

Conclusion

Further Reading

Resources

References

Chapter 2

Organising Discourse: Thematic and information structure

Introduction

Organising discourse

Structure of the English clause

Subject and Predicator

Non-canonical Subjects

Object

Complement and Adjunct

Passive clauses

Summary of clause structure

Thematic structure

Theme and Rheme

Theme in declarative clauses

Subject as Theme

Marked themes

Theme in interrogative and imperative clauses

Marked themes

Theme in complex sentences

Compound Themes

Continuatives

Conjunctions

Conjunctive and modal adjuncts

Vocatives

Multiple elements

Special Themes

Clefting

Pseuodo-clefts

Fronted or preposed themes

Passive clauses

Information structure: Given and New

What is Given-New information?

Signalling Given-New information

Given-New and Theme and Rheme

Given injustice: the case of Derek Bentley

Given-New in spoken English

Stress and prominence

Given-New and special Themes

Conclusion

Answers to the activities

References

Chapter 3

Organising Information in Discourse: Cohesion

Introduction

Coherence and Cohesion in discourse

Reference

Endophoric versus exophoric reference

Endophoric reference: anaphora and cataphora

Personal, demonstrative, and comparative reference

Personal reference

Demonstrative reference

Comparative reference

Ellipsis and Substitution

Ellipsis

Substitution

Conjunction

Temporal

Additive

Adversative

Causal

Coordinating conjunctions

Conjunction summary

Reiteration (lexical cohesion)

Conclusion

Answers to activities

References

Chapter 4

Analysing spoken discourse

Introduction

How spoken discourse is analysed

Data used in this chapter

Spoken Interactions

Prosody in spoken discourse

Pauses

Intonation

Other prosodic features

Syntax

Turns, turn-taking and turn transition

Turns

Turn taking

Turn transition

Functional analysis of turns

Acts and actions

Form and function

Sequencing

Adjacency pairs

Support Acts

Sequence expansion

Sequence Coupling

Pairs with three parts

Preferred/dis-preferred responses

Backchannels

Overlapping talk

Summary of transcription conventions

Conclusion

Further reading

Resources

Answers to activities

References

Chapter 5

Analysing meaning in discourse

Introduction

What do we mean by meaning?

Conceptual meaning

Signifier, signified and referent

Connotative meaning

Affective meaning

Social meaning

Reflected meaning

Collocative meaning

Working out meaning in discourse: co-text and context

Entailment

Presupposition

Existential presuppositions

Logical presupposition

Lexical triggers

Syntactic triggers

Testing presuppositions

Presupposition and propositions

Presupposition and entailment

Conclusion

Further Reading

Answers to Activities

References

Chapter 6

Meaning and context

Introduction

What is pragmatics?

Implicature

Cooperative principle

Maxims

Flouting maxims

Flouting the maxims of Quantity

Flouting the maxims of Quality

Flouting the maxim of Relation

Flouting the category of manner

Violating maxims and opting out

Violate

Explicitly opt out

Infringement of maxims

Doing Implicatures in real discourse: Memes

Context, culture, and implicature

Conclusion

Further reading

References

Chapter 7

Politeness

Introduction

Face

Face threats and face-work

Using politeness strategies to mitigate face-threatening acts

On-record FTAs

Off-record strategies

The humble ‘hedge’

Non-linguistic considerations

Power (P)

Social distance (D)

Ranking of imposition (R)

A short analysis of football press conferences

Conclusion

Further reading:

Answers to activities

References

Chapter 8

Metaphorical meanings in discourse: Metaphor and Metonymy

Introduction

What is a metaphor?

The conceptual basis of metaphors

The experiential basis of metaphors

Novel metaphors

Analysing the ‘hiving’ metaphor

What do we map and why?

Novel metaphors in song lyrics

Extended metaphors

Metaphors in political discourse

Metonymy

Within-domain mapping

Metonymy or metaphor?

Ubiquity of metonyms

Metonymy and worldview

‘Karenymy’

Metaphors and Metonymies

A ‘moo’ point

Conclusion

Further Reading

Answers to activities

References

Chapter 9

Representing experience in discourse

Introduction

Sentences and clauses

Telling and retelling

Different ways of telling

Another way of telling:

Nominalisation

Passives

The transitivity model

Representing ‘inner’ and ‘outer’ experience

Material processes

Circumstances

Mental Processes

Representing ‘states’ of being and ‘having’: Existential and Relational Processes

Existential processes

Relational processes

Verbal Processes

The discourse situation

Case Study: A case of domestic violence

To convict or not to convict?

Analysing the initial crime report

Analysing the summary report (MG3) of the domestic violence crime

Relational processes in the MG3 account of the crime

Analysing the police Gatekeeper’s contribution to the case

Conclusion

Further Reading

Answers to activities

References

Chapter 10

Presenting other people’s speech, writing and thought

Introduction

What is discourse presentation?

Discourse presentation and different voices

Report, representation and presentation

Different types of discourse presentation

Direct Speech, Writing and Thought (DS/DW/DT)

Indirect Speech, Writing and Thought (IS/IW/IT)

Reporting clauses

Free Indirect Speech, Writing and Thought (FIS/FIW/FIT)

Presentation of Speech, Writing and Thought Acts (PSA/PWA/PTA)

Presentation of Speech, Writing and Thought (PS/PW/PT)

Summary

Attribution of source of original

Legitimation

Faithfulness

Conclusion

Further reading

Answers to activities

References

Chapter 11

Corpus linguistics and discourse analysis

Introduction

Corpus linguistics

What is a corpus?

What is corpus linguistics?

Corpus linguistics and discourse analysis

Sampling, representativeness and language variety

Language variety

Sampling

Representativeness

Corpus not always required!

Using corpus methods to analyse corpora

Word frequency analysis

Word frequencies and language change across time

Wordlists ranked by frequency

Concordance analysis

Sorted concordances

Categorising results

Making comparisons between corpora

Choosing a suitable reference corpus

Comparing LHRC against ICE-FLOB

Keyness and keywords

Statistical significance

Effect size: measuring the scale of the difference

Keyness

What counts as a keyword? Using statistical cut-offs to decide

Keywords in LHRC

Intra-corpus comparison

Collocation

Calculating collocates

Using statistical cut-offs to decide what counts as a collocate

Statistically salient collocates of ‘was’ in LHRC

N-grams

N-grams in the LHRC

Conclusion

Further Reading

Corpus tools

Corpora

Answers to Activities

References

Chapter 12

Doing a project in discourse analysis

Introduction

Thinking about discourse as the focus of a project

Systematicity and the three ‘R’s’ of research

Ethics

Informed consent

Observer paradox

Anonymity

Copyright

Developing a research project

Deductive and inductive research

Hypotheses

Objectives and research questions

Defining terms

Controlling variables

Data

Analysing your data

Writing up your research – doing academic discourse

Conclusion

Further reading

Answers to activities

References

Appendices

Appendix 1 Sample statement declaring consent for a study

Appendix 2 Information for participants

Index

Discourse Analysis

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 24 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Patricia Canning, Brian Walker

    15 in stock


      View other formats and editions of Discourse Analysis by Patricia Canning

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis
      Publication Date: 1/31/2024 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781138047099, 978-1138047099
      ISBN10: 1138047090

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Discourse Analysis provides an essential and practical introduction for students studying modules on the analysis of language in use. It explores the ways in which language is used and organised in written and spoken texts to generate meanings and takes into account the social contexts of production, and the social roles and identities of those involved.

      Investigating the ways in which language varies according to subject, social setting, and communicative purpose, this book examines various forms of speaking and writing, including casual conversation, speeches, parliamentary debate, computer-mediated communication, and mass media articles. It discusses topics including how we convey more than we actually say or write, the role of politeness and impoliteness in communication, and what makes texts cohesive and coherent. It also shows how particular aspects of discourse analysis can be assisted by corpus methods and tools.

      Taking students through a step-by-step g

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements

      Figures

      Tables

      Activities

      QR codes

      IPA chart

      Chapter 1

      Discourse: Language, context, and choice

      Introduction

      What is discourse?

      What is discourse analysis?

      The nuts and bolts of discourse

      Morphology

      Phonology

      Lexis

      Lexical creativity

      Graphology

      Syntax

      Semantics

      Discourse

      Text

      ‘Have you sheeted?’ – discussion

      Discourse communities

      Meaning potential

      Understanding context

      Expanding context (the role of background knowledge)

      Context and relevance

      Co-text

      Spoken and written discourse

      Discourse markers

      Standard English (or the issue of convention)

      Sociolinguistic Variables

      Conclusion

      Further Reading

      Resources

      References

      Chapter 2

      Organising Discourse: Thematic and information structure

      Introduction

      Organising discourse

      Structure of the English clause

      Subject and Predicator

      Non-canonical Subjects

      Object

      Complement and Adjunct

      Passive clauses

      Summary of clause structure

      Thematic structure

      Theme and Rheme

      Theme in declarative clauses

      Subject as Theme

      Marked themes

      Theme in interrogative and imperative clauses

      Marked themes

      Theme in complex sentences

      Compound Themes

      Continuatives

      Conjunctions

      Conjunctive and modal adjuncts

      Vocatives

      Multiple elements

      Special Themes

      Clefting

      Pseuodo-clefts

      Fronted or preposed themes

      Passive clauses

      Information structure: Given and New

      What is Given-New information?

      Signalling Given-New information

      Given-New and Theme and Rheme

      Given injustice: the case of Derek Bentley

      Given-New in spoken English

      Stress and prominence

      Given-New and special Themes

      Conclusion

      Answers to the activities

      References

      Chapter 3

      Organising Information in Discourse: Cohesion

      Introduction

      Coherence and Cohesion in discourse

      Reference

      Endophoric versus exophoric reference

      Endophoric reference: anaphora and cataphora

      Personal, demonstrative, and comparative reference

      Personal reference

      Demonstrative reference

      Comparative reference

      Ellipsis and Substitution

      Ellipsis

      Substitution

      Conjunction

      Temporal

      Additive

      Adversative

      Causal

      Coordinating conjunctions

      Conjunction summary

      Reiteration (lexical cohesion)

      Conclusion

      Answers to activities

      References

      Chapter 4

      Analysing spoken discourse

      Introduction

      How spoken discourse is analysed

      Data used in this chapter

      Spoken Interactions

      Prosody in spoken discourse

      Pauses

      Intonation

      Other prosodic features

      Syntax

      Turns, turn-taking and turn transition

      Turns

      Turn taking

      Turn transition

      Functional analysis of turns

      Acts and actions

      Form and function

      Sequencing

      Adjacency pairs

      Support Acts

      Sequence expansion

      Sequence Coupling

      Pairs with three parts

      Preferred/dis-preferred responses

      Backchannels

      Overlapping talk

      Summary of transcription conventions

      Conclusion

      Further reading

      Resources

      Answers to activities

      References

      Chapter 5

      Analysing meaning in discourse

      Introduction

      What do we mean by meaning?

      Conceptual meaning

      Signifier, signified and referent

      Connotative meaning

      Affective meaning

      Social meaning

      Reflected meaning

      Collocative meaning

      Working out meaning in discourse: co-text and context

      Entailment

      Presupposition

      Existential presuppositions

      Logical presupposition

      Lexical triggers

      Syntactic triggers

      Testing presuppositions

      Presupposition and propositions

      Presupposition and entailment

      Conclusion

      Further Reading

      Answers to Activities

      References

      Chapter 6

      Meaning and context

      Introduction

      What is pragmatics?

      Implicature

      Cooperative principle

      Maxims

      Flouting maxims

      Flouting the maxims of Quantity

      Flouting the maxims of Quality

      Flouting the maxim of Relation

      Flouting the category of manner

      Violating maxims and opting out

      Violate

      Explicitly opt out

      Infringement of maxims

      Doing Implicatures in real discourse: Memes

      Context, culture, and implicature

      Conclusion

      Further reading

      References

      Chapter 7

      Politeness

      Introduction

      Face

      Face threats and face-work

      Using politeness strategies to mitigate face-threatening acts

      On-record FTAs

      Off-record strategies

      The humble ‘hedge’

      Non-linguistic considerations

      Power (P)

      Social distance (D)

      Ranking of imposition (R)

      A short analysis of football press conferences

      Conclusion

      Further reading:

      Answers to activities

      References

      Chapter 8

      Metaphorical meanings in discourse: Metaphor and Metonymy

      Introduction

      What is a metaphor?

      The conceptual basis of metaphors

      The experiential basis of metaphors

      Novel metaphors

      Analysing the ‘hiving’ metaphor

      What do we map and why?

      Novel metaphors in song lyrics

      Extended metaphors

      Metaphors in political discourse

      Metonymy

      Within-domain mapping

      Metonymy or metaphor?

      Ubiquity of metonyms

      Metonymy and worldview

      ‘Karenymy’

      Metaphors and Metonymies

      A ‘moo’ point

      Conclusion

      Further Reading

      Answers to activities

      References

      Chapter 9

      Representing experience in discourse

      Introduction

      Sentences and clauses

      Telling and retelling

      Different ways of telling

      Another way of telling:

      Nominalisation

      Passives

      The transitivity model

      Representing ‘inner’ and ‘outer’ experience

      Material processes

      Circumstances

      Mental Processes

      Representing ‘states’ of being and ‘having’: Existential and Relational Processes

      Existential processes

      Relational processes

      Verbal Processes

      The discourse situation

      Case Study: A case of domestic violence

      To convict or not to convict?

      Analysing the initial crime report

      Analysing the summary report (MG3) of the domestic violence crime

      Relational processes in the MG3 account of the crime

      Analysing the police Gatekeeper’s contribution to the case

      Conclusion

      Further Reading

      Answers to activities

      References

      Chapter 10

      Presenting other people’s speech, writing and thought

      Introduction

      What is discourse presentation?

      Discourse presentation and different voices

      Report, representation and presentation

      Different types of discourse presentation

      Direct Speech, Writing and Thought (DS/DW/DT)

      Indirect Speech, Writing and Thought (IS/IW/IT)

      Reporting clauses

      Free Indirect Speech, Writing and Thought (FIS/FIW/FIT)

      Presentation of Speech, Writing and Thought Acts (PSA/PWA/PTA)

      Presentation of Speech, Writing and Thought (PS/PW/PT)

      Summary

      Attribution of source of original

      Legitimation

      Faithfulness

      Conclusion

      Further reading

      Answers to activities

      References

      Chapter 11

      Corpus linguistics and discourse analysis

      Introduction

      Corpus linguistics

      What is a corpus?

      What is corpus linguistics?

      Corpus linguistics and discourse analysis

      Sampling, representativeness and language variety

      Language variety

      Sampling

      Representativeness

      Corpus not always required!

      Using corpus methods to analyse corpora

      Word frequency analysis

      Word frequencies and language change across time

      Wordlists ranked by frequency

      Concordance analysis

      Sorted concordances

      Categorising results

      Making comparisons between corpora

      Choosing a suitable reference corpus

      Comparing LHRC against ICE-FLOB

      Keyness and keywords

      Statistical significance

      Effect size: measuring the scale of the difference

      Keyness

      What counts as a keyword? Using statistical cut-offs to decide

      Keywords in LHRC

      Intra-corpus comparison

      Collocation

      Calculating collocates

      Using statistical cut-offs to decide what counts as a collocate

      Statistically salient collocates of ‘was’ in LHRC

      N-grams

      N-grams in the LHRC

      Conclusion

      Further Reading

      Corpus tools

      Corpora

      Answers to Activities

      References

      Chapter 12

      Doing a project in discourse analysis

      Introduction

      Thinking about discourse as the focus of a project

      Systematicity and the three ‘R’s’ of research

      Ethics

      Informed consent

      Observer paradox

      Anonymity

      Copyright

      Developing a research project

      Deductive and inductive research

      Hypotheses

      Objectives and research questions

      Defining terms

      Controlling variables

      Data

      Analysing your data

      Writing up your research – doing academic discourse

      Conclusion

      Further reading

      Answers to activities

      References

      Appendices

      Appendix 1 Sample statement declaring consent for a study

      Appendix 2 Information for participants

      Index

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