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The metalinguistics of offence in (British) English:A corpus-based metapragmatic approach
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The metalinguistics of offence in (British) English: a corpus-based metapragmatic approach
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The metapragmatics of consideration in (Australian and New Zealand) English
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Offence and conflict talk
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Abstract:
This chapter discusses the way in which the initial disagreeing or opposing move is itself very often triggered by some kind of offence on the part of another party and how construing the conduct of others as offensive can thus occasion conflict. It draws on attention to a number of key distinctions that are of particular import when studying the relationship between offence and conflict talk. The chapter focuses on the distinctions between “causing�?/“giving�? and “taking�? offence, and with respect to the latter, between “feeling�?/“being�? offended as a kind of moral-affective stance and “taking�? offence as a form of social action, that is, “claiming�?/“indicating�? that is offended. It also focuses on the way in which taking offence can lead to conflict in various kinds of situated discourse. The chapter reviews possible future avenues of research and importance of examining causing offence, claiming or taking offence, in a range of situated discourse settings in different languages and varieties therein.
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Keyword:
1200 Arts and Humanities; 3300 Social Sciences
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URL: https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:977123a
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“The apology seemed (in)sincere”: Variability in perceptions of (im)politeness
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Indexical and sequential properties of criticisms in initial interactions: implications for examining (Im) politeness across cultures
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Modulating troubles affiliating in initial interactions the role of remedial accounts
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Conversational lapses and laughter: towards a combinatorial approach to building collections in conversation analysis
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The interactional achievement of speaker meaning: Toward a formal account of conversational inference
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Divided by a common language? Jocular quips and (non-)affiliative responses in initial interactions among American and Australian speakers of English
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Malefactive uses of giving/receiving expressions: the case of te-kureru in Japanese
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Accusations and interpersonal conflict in televised multi-party interactions amongst speakers of (Argentinian and Peninsular) Spanish
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The interactional achievement of speaker meaning: toward a formal account of conversational inference
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