
Coherence in Spoken and Written Discourse
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- COHERENCE IN SPOKEN AND WRITTEN DISCOURSE
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Table of contents
- Acknowledgements
- About the authors
- Introduction: Views of Coherence
- Part I: How to (Re-)Create Coherence: Means of Coherence
- Coherent Voicing: On Prosody in Conversational Reported Speech
- 1 Coherence as a conversationalist's practice and an analyst's object
- 2 Three types of 'trouble' in reported speech sequences
- 3 Prosodie and paralinguistic framing in 'successful' reported speech sequences
- 4 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- It Takes Two to Cohere: The Collaborative Dimension of Topical Coherence in Conversation
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Simple negotiations
- 3 Pre-signalling a proposed topic
- 4 Complex negotiations
- 5 Unsuccessful negotiations
- 6 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Learning to Cohere: Causal Links in Native vs. Non-Native Argumentative Writing
- 1 Review of the issue: cohesive ties in learners' writing
- 2 A contrastive developmental corpus: rationale and retrieval
- 3 Causal conjunctions I: dealing with numerical data
- 4 Causal conjunctions II: pointers to non-native patterns
- 5 Causal adverbs and prepositions
- 6 Extending the search: lexical causal patterns
- 7 Lexical strategies, semantic prosody and more non-native patterns
- 8 Summing up: idiomaticity and non-native deviancies
- Notes
- References
- Coherence through Understanding through Discourse Patterns: Focus on News Reports
- 1 Aim
- 2 Genres and text types - coherence and cohesion
- 3 Introducing the notion discourse pattern
- 4 Coherence in terms of understanding
- 5 Coherence in terms of discourse patterns
- 6 On the ontologicai status of discourse patterns
- 7 Conflating discourse patterns in the American press: Clinton and Yeltsin in Helsinki
- 8 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Semiotic Spanning at Conferences: Cohesion and Coherence in and across Conference Papers and their Discussions
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Why conference papers and discussions as data?
- 3 Cohesion and coherence
- 4 Intertextuality
- 5 Genre
- 6 Semiotic spanning
- 7 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Coherent Keying in Conversational Humour: Contextualising Joint Fictionalisation
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Punchlines, humorous keying and relevan
- 3 Discussion of Data 1
- 4 Discussion of Data 2
- 5 Topic shift vs. keying shift
- 6 Closing remarks
- Notes
- References
- Part II: How to Negotiate Coherence: Degrees of Coherence
- Disturbed Coherence: 'Fill me in'
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Coherence as a scalar notion
- 3 Default principle of coherence
- 4 Some examples
- 5 Disturbed coherence versus coherence impairment
- 6 Types of disturbed coherence
- 7 Sources of disturbed coherence
- 8 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Coherence and Misunderstanding in Everyday Conversations
- 1 Coherence and misunderstanding
- 2 Interactional development of misunderstanding
- 3 Conclusions
- Notes
- References
- The Effect of Context in the Definition and Negotiation of Coherence
- 1 Introduction and aims
- 2 The oral examination in Italian universities
- 3 The context-dependency of coherence
- 4 Negotiating coherence
- 5 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Coherence in Summary: The Contexts of Appropriate Discourse
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Definitions
- 3 Written language use
- 4 Co-operation and interpretation
- 5 Coherence and appropriation of meaning
- 6 Appropriation and summarisation
- 7 Summaries vs. accounts
- 8 Participant roles
- 9 Conclusion: the partiality of coherence
- References
- Coherence in Hypertext
- 1 Introduction
- 2 What is hypertext?
- 3 Paths in hypertext
- 4 Coherence in self-selected paths
- 5 Conclusions
- Notes
- References
- Part III: How to Describe Coherence: Views of Coherence
- Communicative Intentions and Coherence Relations
- 1 The coherence of discourse
- 2 A popular position: the multi-level thesis
- 3 Why the (strong) multi-level thesis is wrong
- 4 Toward a cognitive account of relations and intentions
- 5 The Bush example: propositional and illocutionary relations in context
- 6 Conclusion: intentions and relations in a cognitive theory of coherence
- Notes
- References
- If Coherence is Achieved, Then Where Doth Meaning Lie?
- 1 Discourse, coherence, and the mind
- 2 Some features of discourse in the light of this view of coherence
- 3 The status of discourse analysis
- 4 Discourse analysis and discourse theory
- 5 Towards a universal theory of discourse
- 6 The concept of co-existing discourse worlds
- 7 Summary
- Notes
- References
- A Bibliography of Coherence and Cohesion
- Index
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