本叢書為外教社從JohnBenjamins出版公司引進的一套10本語言學原版專著,叢書研討的專題包括了語用學與哲學、認知語言學、語法、社會學、文化學的交叉領域,展現(xiàn)了語用學研究的最前沿發(fā)現(xiàn)。森夫特所著的《文化與語言的使用》為叢書之一,展現(xiàn)了語用學在文化方面的研究。
Preface to the seriesAcknowledgementsIntroductionGunter SentiAisatsuRisako Ide 1. Introduction: The pragmatics and metapragmatics of routine formulae Preface to the seriesAcknowledgementsIntroductionGunter SentiAisatsuRisako Ide 1. Introduction: The pragmatics and metapragmatics of routine formulae 2. The anatomy of aisatsu 2.1 Marking social relationships 2.2 Marking contextual boundaries 3. The social acquisition of aisatsu 3.1 Aisatsu in school contexts 3.2 Aisatsu in workplace contexts 4. The pragmatics of aisatsu within the metapragmatics of aisatsu 5. Exploring intercultural routine formulaeAnthropological linguisticsBen G. Blount 1. Preliminaries 2. Early history 3. Early types of research 4. Continuity 5. The Sapir-Whorfhypothesis 6. Ethnographic semantics 7. The ethnography of communication 8. Sociolinguistics 9. Recent research and current directionsFranz BoasRegna Darnell 1. Introduction 2. Biography 3. The Americanist tradition 4. Time perspective in aboriginal languages 5. The Handbook of American Indian Languages 6. Phonetics vs. phonemics 7. AssessmentCognitive anthropologyStephen C. Levinson 1. Historical background 2. Reconstruing cognitive anthropologyComponential analysisCliff Goddard 1. Introduction 2. The structuralist tradition 3. Linguistic anthropology 4. Generative and typological studies 5. Natural semantic metalanguage (NSM) 6. Other trends and problemsCultural scriptsCliff Goddard 1. Introduction 2. Semantic primes: The language of cultural scripts 3. High-level scripts: Examples and observations 4. Communicative style: Some further examples 5. Culture-specific concepts in cultural scripts 6. Rhetorical speech practices 7. Scripts for ways of thinking and feeling, and for beliefs 8. Scripts for social models 9. Scripts for non-verbal communicative practices 10. The accessibility and practicality of cultural scripts 11. Closing noteCultureSrikant Sarangi 1. Introduction: Culture as an interdisciplinary project 2. Defining and redefining culture: An overview 2.1 The historical transformation of the culture concept 2.2 What is not culture 2.3 What is culture 2.3.1 The whole is the sum of parts: The mentalist approach 2.3.2 A map of and for behavior: The behaviorist approach 2.3.3 The metaphor of culture as text: The semiotic approach 2.4 Culture is a verb 3. Culture as ideology: From a consensual to a differentiated view of culture 3.1 The construction of the cultural other 3.2 The politics of cultural difference in stratified multicultural societies 4. Doing cultural analysis: A critique of the method 4.1 The dominance of intensive fieldwork 4.2 The subjectivity of participant observation 4.3 Doing and writing ethnography as interpretation and invention 5. Culture as communication: The 'linguistic' turn 5.1 One language -- one culture? 5.2 Language as a means to cultural resources 6. Cross-cultural and intercultural analysis in pragmatic research 6.1 Cross-cultural pragmatic research: The culture principle 6.2 Intercultural pragmatics: Towards a critical reading 7. Conclusion: The pragmatics of recovering cultureElicitationGunter SenftEthnographyMichael Agar 1. Introduction 2. Ethnography by example 3. Ethnography by contrast 4. DiscourseEthnography of speakingKristine L. Fitch & Gerry Philipsen 1. Development and main characteristics 2. Areas ofinquiry 3. Issues and debatesFieldworkGunter SentiFirthian linguisticsJan-Ola Ostman & Anne-Marie Simon-VandenbergenFolk pragmaticsNancy Niedzielski & Dennis R. Preston 1. Folk linguistics 2. Folk pragmatics 3. Directions for future researchHonorificsJudith T. Irvine 1. Definitions 2. Dimensions of variation and comparison 2.1 Linguistic forms 2.2 Sources of honorific expressions 2.3 Honorification roles and participant roles 2.4 Deployment and ideology 3. Pragmatics and semantics 4. Trends in theory and researchWilhelm von HumboldtBrigitte Nerlich & David D. Clarke 1. Life 2. Humboldt's philosophy of language 3. Language and thought 4. Language and world 5. Language and languages (superior and inferior ones) 6. Language, culture, and creativity 7. Language, dialogue, and pronouns 8. Humboldt and the IdeologuesIntercultural communicationVolker Hinnenkamp 1. Background: Language and culture 2. Intercultural communication: The emergence of a field of inquiry 3. The concept of culture 4. Loci of culture-in-communication 5. Methodological (sub)discourses of the field 6. ConclusionInterviewCharles Briggs 1. Introduction 2. The construction of interviews and questionnaires 3. Research on interviewing 4. Pragmatic underpinnings of interviews 5. Interviewing and institutional authority 6. ConclusionBronislaw Kasper MalinowskiGunter Senft 1. Biographical sketch 2. The study of culture 3. Fieldwork 4. Theory of language 5. An appraisalPhatic communionGunter SenftEdward SapirJeroen Vermeulen 1. Introduction 2. Biography 3. Sapir on language, culture and personality 3.1 Language 3.1.1 Americanist text tradition 3.1.2 Linguistic form 3.1.3 Form-feeling 3.1.4 Linguistic relativity 3.2 Culture and personality 4. Sapir's importance to pragmaticsTaxonomyRobert E. MacLauryBenjamin Lee WhoffPenny Lee 1. Introduction 2. Whorf's life and work 3. Whorf's perspective on linguistics 4. The linguistic relativity principle 5. Whorf's influenceIndex