An edition of Gender and discourse (1994)

Gender and discourse

[Paperback ed.]
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Gender and discourse
Deborah Tannen
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December 15, 2009 | History
An edition of Gender and discourse (1994)

Gender and discourse

[Paperback ed.]
  • 0 Ratings
  • 4 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

Deborah Tannen's You Just Don't Understand has been on the New York Times Best Seller list for nearly four years. Clearly, Tannen's insights into women's and men's conversational styles have touched a nerve. For years an internationally known and highly respected scholar in the field of linguistics, she has now become widely known for her work on how language both reflects and affects relations between men and women.

Her life work has demonstrated how close and intelligent analysis of conversation can reveal the extraordinary complexities of social relationships - including relations between men and women.

Now, in Gender and Discourse, Tannen has gathered together five of her essays on language and gender to elaborate the theoretical and empirical framework that underlies her bestselling book.

She has written an informative introduction which discusses her field of linguistics, describes the research methods she typically uses, and addresses the controversies associated with her field as well as some misrepresentations of her work. (She argues, for instance, that her approach to gender differences does not deny that men dominate women in society, nor does it ascribe gender differences to women's "essential nature.") The essays themselves cover a wide range of topics. In one, she analyzes a number of conversational strategies - such as interruption, topic raising, indirectness, and silence - and shows that, contrary to earlier work on language and gender, no strategy is linked inflexibly to dominance or powerlessness in conversation. Interruption (or overlap) can be supportive as well as dominant; silence and indirectness can express control as well as powerlessness.

The interactional context, the participants' individual styles, and the interaction of their styles, Tannen shows, all influence the balance of power.

She also provides a fascinating analysis of four groups of males and females (second-, sixth-, and tenth-grade students, and 25 year olds) conversing with their best friends, and she includes an early article co-authored with Robin Lakoff that presents a theory of conversational strategy, illustrated by analysis of dialogue in Ingmar Bergman's Scenes From a Marriage.

Readers interested in a deeper and more detailed understanding of Tannen's work will find this volume fascinating. It will be sure to interest anyone curious about the crucial yet often unnoticed role that language and gender play in our daily lives.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
229

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Gender and discourse
Gender and discourse
1996, Oxford University Press
in English - [Paperback ed.]
Cover of: Gender and discourse
Gender and discourse
1994, Oxford University Press
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Previous ed., 1994.

Cover subtitle: featuring a new essay on talk at work.

Includes bibliographies and index.

Published in
New York, Oxford

The Physical Object

Pagination
x,229p. :
Number of pages
229

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL17278480M

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