目錄:Unit 1 An Overview of Pragmatics ……………………………………………………………………………………1
Text A Defining Pragmatics ……………………………………………………… 3
Text B A Brief History of Pragmatics …………………………………………… 5
Text C From Abstract Meaning to Contextual Meaning …………………………10
Text D Context: A Key Notion in Pragmatics ……………………………………12
Text E Appropriacy ………………………………………………………………13
Unit 2 Deixis ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 16
Text A Deixis ……………………………………………………………………18
Text B Social Deixis and Discourse Deixis ……………………………………24
Text C Deictics …………………………………………………………………28
Text D Deictic Centre and Competing Deictic Centres …………………………30
Text E Zonglish …………………………………………………………………32
Unit 3 Speech Acts (I) …………………………………………………………………………………………………… 34
Text A Austin’s Performatives ……………………………………………………36
Text B Utterances as Actions ……………………………………………………38
Text C Austin’s Felicity Conditions on Performatives …………………………44
Text D Speech Acts: Language as Action ………………………………………46
Text E John Langshaw Austin ……………………………………………………48
Unit 4 Speech Acts (II) ………………………………………………………………………………………………… 50
Text A Searle’s Typology of Speech Acts ………………………………………52
Text B Direct and Indirect Speech Acts …………………………………………55
Text C Pragmatics and Indirectness ………………………………………………61
Text D Searle’s Felicity Conditions ………………………………………………63
Text E John Rogers Searle ………………………………………………………65
Unit 5 Implicatures (I) …………………………………………………………………………………………………… 67
Text A Grice’s Cooperative Principle ……………………………………………69
Text B Observing and Flouting the Maxims ……………………………………72
Text C Conventional Implicature and Conversational Implicature ………………80
Text D Properties of Conversational Implicature ………………………………84
語用學教程.indd 1 2018-5-17 13:49:40
2
語用學教程
Pragmatics: A Course Book
Text E Herbert Pul Grice ………………………………………………………87
Unit 6 Implicatures (II) ………………………………………………………………………………………………… 90
Text A Problems with Grice’s Theory ……………………………………………92
Text B Developments of Grice’s Theory ………………………………………94
Text C Relevance Theory …………………………………………………… 100
Text D Post-Gricean Pragmatics ……………………………………………… 103
Text E Stephen C. Levinson ………………………………………………… 107
Unit 7 Conversational Structure ………………………………………………………………………………… 109
Text A What is Conversation? ………………………………………………… 111
Text B Turn-taking and Adjacency Pair ……………………………………… 113
Text C Pre-sequences ………………………………………………………… 118
Text D Preference and Dispreference ………………………………………… 122
Text E The Place of Conversation Among the Speech-exchange Systems … 124
Unit 8 Politeness ………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 126
Text A Brown and Levinson’s Linguistic Politeness Model ………………… 127
Text B Leech’s Politeness Model …………………………………………… 130
Text C Perspectives on Politeness …………………………………………… 135
Text D Towards an Anatomy of Impoliteness ………………………………… 142
Text E Geoffrey Neil Leech …………………………………………………… 152
Unit 9 Macropragmatics …………………………………………………………………………………………… 157
Text A Variability, Negotiability and Adaptability …………………………… 158
Text B Pragmatic Acts and Action Theory …………………………………… 163
Text C Intercultural Pragmatics ……………………………………………… 170
Text D Variational Pragmatics ………………………………………………… 178
Text E Some Thoughts on Pragmatics, Sociolinguistic Variation, and
Intercultural Communication ………………………………………… 185
Unit 10 Pragmatics and Its Interfaces ………………………………………………… 194
Text A The Semantics/Pragmatics Distinction ……………………………… 196
Text B Pragmatics and Grammar …………………………………………… 198
Text C Pragmatics and Prosody ……………………………………………… 206
Text D Literary Pragmatics: An Overview …………………………………… 209
Text E Anticipatory Pragmatics ……………………………………………… 212
語