Description

Book Synopsis
This book explores the linguistic nature of American movie conversation, pointing out its resemblances to face-to-face conversation. The reason for such an investigation lies in the fact that movie language is traditionally considered to be non-representative of spontaneous language. The book presents a corpus-driven study of the similarities between face-to-face and movie conversation, using detailed consideration of individual lexical phrases and linguistic features as well as Biber’s Multi-Dimensional Analysis (1998). The data from an existing spoken American English corpus – the Longman Spoken American Corpus – is compared to the American Movie Corpus, a corpus of American movie conversation purposely built for the research. On the basis of evidence from these corpora, the book shows that contemporary movie conversation does not differ significantly from face-to-face conversation, and can therefore be legitimately used to study and teach natural spoken language.

Table of Contents
Contents: Opening Credits: Face-to-Face and Movie Conversation – The Making of: Methodology and Data – Shot 1: Multi-Dimensional Analysis of Face-to-Face and Movie Conversation – Shot 2: Close-ups – Closing Credits: Implications and Applications.

Movie Language Revisited: Evidence from

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    A Paperback / softback by Giovanni Gobber, Marisa Verna, Pierfranca Forchini

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      View other formats and editions of Movie Language Revisited: Evidence from by Giovanni Gobber

      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 20/12/2011
      ISBN13: 9783034310765, 978-3034310765
      ISBN10: 3034310765

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book explores the linguistic nature of American movie conversation, pointing out its resemblances to face-to-face conversation. The reason for such an investigation lies in the fact that movie language is traditionally considered to be non-representative of spontaneous language. The book presents a corpus-driven study of the similarities between face-to-face and movie conversation, using detailed consideration of individual lexical phrases and linguistic features as well as Biber’s Multi-Dimensional Analysis (1998). The data from an existing spoken American English corpus – the Longman Spoken American Corpus – is compared to the American Movie Corpus, a corpus of American movie conversation purposely built for the research. On the basis of evidence from these corpora, the book shows that contemporary movie conversation does not differ significantly from face-to-face conversation, and can therefore be legitimately used to study and teach natural spoken language.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Opening Credits: Face-to-Face and Movie Conversation – The Making of: Methodology and Data – Shot 1: Multi-Dimensional Analysis of Face-to-Face and Movie Conversation – Shot 2: Close-ups – Closing Credits: Implications and Applications.

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