Using Language

This book argues that language use is more than the sum of a speaker speaking and a listener listening. It is the joint action that emerges when speakers and listeners - writers and readers - perform their individual actions in coordination, as ensembles. The author argues strongly that language use embodies both individual and social processes.

• Herbert Clark is one of world’s leading psycholinguists, and this is his first big book for many years • He has published papers over the last ten years on this topic in major journals such as Language and Cognition, and this book is eagerly awaited • Controversial thesis with wide readership in cognitive and social sciences

Contents

Preface; Part I. Introduction: 1. Language use; Part II. Foundations: 2. Joint activities; 3. Joint actions; 4. Common ground; Part III. Communicative acts: 5. Meaning and understanding; 6. Signaling; Part IV. Levels of action: 7. Joint projects; 8. Grounding; 9. Utterances; Part V. Discourse: 10. Joint commitment; 11. Conversation; 12. Layering; Part VI. Conclusion: 13. Conclusion; References.

Reviews

‘This is a bold, imaginative, and important book. Clark’s focus on language use, and his contention that conversation transforms the nature of production and comprehension, pose a challenge to the prevailing psycholinguistic approach to language. Cognitive scientists, social psychologists, sociologists, anthropologists - indeed, all concerned with the way people employ language to accomplish their purposes in the world - will find much to interest them in this integrative and original work.’ Professor Robert M. Krauss, Columbia University

‘Using Language is a lucid exposition of views that Clark has been developing for over a decade. The central argument is that language must be seen within the complex belief and intentional context in which it is used. Clark tries to pinpoint exactly those features of the intentional context - the set of assumptions and ascribed intentions - which make communication possible, and, often, effortlessly effective. It is undoubtedly his major work to date.’ Stephen C. Levinson, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen

Av samme forfatter: