Irony, Quotation, and Other Forms of Staged Intertextuality : double or Contrastive Perspectivation in Conversation
Irony, Quotation, and Other Forms of Staged Intertextuality : double or Contrastive Perspectivation in Conversation
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1998
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Kotthoff, Helga
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InLiSt - Interaction and Linguistic Structures; 5
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Abstract
In this article I apply concepts of perspectivation (Graumann
1989, 1993, Kallmeyer/ Keim 1996, Sandig 1996),
intertextuality and polyphonic voicing (Bakhtin 1981) to
conversational irony, parody, and quotation.
The concepts of perspectivation and polyphonic voicing can
help to distinguish various forms of doubly-voiced speech from
one another, basically forms of citation and irony. There is a
critical debate over the 'mention-approach to irony' of Sperber& Wilson (1981) and Wilson & Sperber (1992), who do not
satisfactorily distinguish between playful quotation and irony.
'Staged intertextuality' is proposed here as a higher-order
concept for various ways of animating voices (in the sense of
Goffman 1981). Many discourse analysts (Tannen 1984,
Sperber & Wilson 1981, Wilson & Sperber 1992, Barbe 1995)
understand quite diverse types of 'staged intertextuality' as
irony, an approach which will be criticized here.
1989, 1993, Kallmeyer/ Keim 1996, Sandig 1996),
intertextuality and polyphonic voicing (Bakhtin 1981) to
conversational irony, parody, and quotation.
The concepts of perspectivation and polyphonic voicing can
help to distinguish various forms of doubly-voiced speech from
one another, basically forms of citation and irony. There is a
critical debate over the 'mention-approach to irony' of Sperber& Wilson (1981) and Wilson & Sperber (1992), who do not
satisfactorily distinguish between playful quotation and irony.
'Staged intertextuality' is proposed here as a higher-order
concept for various ways of animating voices (in the sense of
Goffman 1981). Many discourse analysts (Tannen 1984,
Sperber & Wilson 1981, Wilson & Sperber 1992, Barbe 1995)
understand quite diverse types of 'staged intertextuality' as
irony, an approach which will be criticized here.
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400 Philology, Linguistics
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Conference
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KOTTHOFF, Helga, 1998. Irony, Quotation, and Other Forms of Staged Intertextuality : double or Contrastive Perspectivation in ConversationBibTex
@techreport{Kotthoff1998Irony-3790, year={1998}, series={InLiSt - Interaction and Linguistic Structures}, title={Irony, Quotation, and Other Forms of Staged Intertextuality : double or Contrastive Perspectivation in Conversation}, number={5}, author={Kotthoff, Helga} }
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