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In Relationship Thinking, N. J. Enfield outlines a framework for analyzing social interaction and its linguistic, cultural, and cognitive underpinnings, by putting human relationships front and center.
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In Relationship Thinking, N. J. Enfield outlines a framework for analyzing social interaction and its linguistic, cultural, and cognitive underpinnings, by putting human relationships front and center.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. November 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 157mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 522g
- ISBN-13: 9780199338733
- ISBN-10: 0199338736
- Artikelnr.: 38589869
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. November 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 157mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 522g
- ISBN-13: 9780199338733
- ISBN-10: 0199338736
- Artikelnr.: 38589869
N. J. Enfield was trained in Asian Studies and Linguistics at the Australian National University (ANU) and Melbourne University, before joining the Language and Cognition Group at the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, the Netherlands, in 2000. His research on language, culture, cognition, and social interaction has been based on regular fieldwork in mainland Southeast Asia, especially Laos. He has coordinated numerous large-scale comparative research projects testing human diversity in a range of domains. His books include Ethnosyntax (OUP 2002), Linguistic Epidemiology (Routledge 2003), Roots of Human Sociality (with SC Levinson, Berg 2006), A Grammar of Lao (Mouton 2007), The Anatomy of Meaning (CUP 2009), and Dynamics of Human Diversity (Pacific Linguistics, 2011).
Introduction
1 Relationships
1.1 The data of relationships
1.2 Context
1.3 Relationship thinking
1.4 Enacting relationships and relationship types
1.5 Relationship-grounded society
2 Sociality
2.1 Human social intelligence
2.2 Social motivations
2.3 Tools for assessment and management
2.4 Semiotic process
2.5 Norms and heuristics
2.6 Communication as tool use
2.7 Two primitive imperatives for communication
3 Enchrony
3.1 Enchrony and its scope
3.2 Causal frames for understanding meaning
3.3 Normative organization
4 Semiosis
4.1 Anatomy of the semiotic process
4.2 Flexibility in semiotic processes
4.3 Inference as a semiotic process
4.4 Cultural epidemiology as a semiotic process
4.5 Elements of the semiotic process and their possibilities
4.6 Payoffs of this framework
4.7 The Saussurean sign: a convenient untruth
4.8 A frame-content dynamic
4.9 Meaning as a public process
5 Status
5.1 Status predicts and explains behavior
5.2 Entitlements, commitments, enablements
5.3 Relationships as statuses
6 Moves
6.1 Moves are composite signs
6.2 Composite utterances are interpreted as wholes
6.3 Turn-taking: moves in linguistic clothing
6.4 The move as a privileged level of semiosis
7 Cognition
7.1 Behavior-reading
7.2 Cognition and language
7.3 Psychology as interpretative heuristic
7.4 Fear of cognition?
8 Action
8.1 Natural action versus social action
8.2 Courses of action
8.3 Speech acts and actions-en
8.4 Categories of action-en?
8.5 A composite notion of actions-en
8.6 Ontology of actions-en
8.7 A generative account of action-en
9 Agency
9.1 Flexibility and accountability
9.2 Agent unity heuristic
9.3 Joint agency
9.4 Distributed agency
10 Asymmetry
10.1 Propositions and the relativity of knowledge
10.2 Epistemic Authority
10.3 Distribution of agency in practice
10.4 Sources of Asymmetry
10.5 Our imperfect communication system
11 Culture
11.1 Cultural systems
11.2 The Kri house as a system context for social relations
11.3 Ritual in communication
11.4 Kri residence
11.5 Practical interpretation of the Kri residence: to follow a norm
11.6 Spatial distribution and diagrammatic iconicity
11.7 Sanction of norms: making the tacit explicit
11.8 Everyday ritual and social relations
12 Grammar
12.1 Language as a system
12.2 Syntagmatic relations: grammar for turns
12.3 Paradigmatic relations in linguistic grammars
12.4 Markedness: special effects of choice within a system
12.5 The Lao system of person reference
12.6 Default reference to persons in Lao
12.7 Pragmatically marked initial references
12.8 Grammar expresses social relations under the radar
13 Knowledge
13.1 Common ground
13.2 Sources of common ground
13.3 Fuel for Gricean amplicative inference
13.4 Grounding for inferring
13.5 Audience design
13.6 Affiliation and information
13.7 From information to social relations
Conclusion
References
Index
1 Relationships
1.1 The data of relationships
1.2 Context
1.3 Relationship thinking
1.4 Enacting relationships and relationship types
1.5 Relationship-grounded society
2 Sociality
2.1 Human social intelligence
2.2 Social motivations
2.3 Tools for assessment and management
2.4 Semiotic process
2.5 Norms and heuristics
2.6 Communication as tool use
2.7 Two primitive imperatives for communication
3 Enchrony
3.1 Enchrony and its scope
3.2 Causal frames for understanding meaning
3.3 Normative organization
4 Semiosis
4.1 Anatomy of the semiotic process
4.2 Flexibility in semiotic processes
4.3 Inference as a semiotic process
4.4 Cultural epidemiology as a semiotic process
4.5 Elements of the semiotic process and their possibilities
4.6 Payoffs of this framework
4.7 The Saussurean sign: a convenient untruth
4.8 A frame-content dynamic
4.9 Meaning as a public process
5 Status
5.1 Status predicts and explains behavior
5.2 Entitlements, commitments, enablements
5.3 Relationships as statuses
6 Moves
6.1 Moves are composite signs
6.2 Composite utterances are interpreted as wholes
6.3 Turn-taking: moves in linguistic clothing
6.4 The move as a privileged level of semiosis
7 Cognition
7.1 Behavior-reading
7.2 Cognition and language
7.3 Psychology as interpretative heuristic
7.4 Fear of cognition?
8 Action
8.1 Natural action versus social action
8.2 Courses of action
8.3 Speech acts and actions-en
8.4 Categories of action-en?
8.5 A composite notion of actions-en
8.6 Ontology of actions-en
8.7 A generative account of action-en
9 Agency
9.1 Flexibility and accountability
9.2 Agent unity heuristic
9.3 Joint agency
9.4 Distributed agency
10 Asymmetry
10.1 Propositions and the relativity of knowledge
10.2 Epistemic Authority
10.3 Distribution of agency in practice
10.4 Sources of Asymmetry
10.5 Our imperfect communication system
11 Culture
11.1 Cultural systems
11.2 The Kri house as a system context for social relations
11.3 Ritual in communication
11.4 Kri residence
11.5 Practical interpretation of the Kri residence: to follow a norm
11.6 Spatial distribution and diagrammatic iconicity
11.7 Sanction of norms: making the tacit explicit
11.8 Everyday ritual and social relations
12 Grammar
12.1 Language as a system
12.2 Syntagmatic relations: grammar for turns
12.3 Paradigmatic relations in linguistic grammars
12.4 Markedness: special effects of choice within a system
12.5 The Lao system of person reference
12.6 Default reference to persons in Lao
12.7 Pragmatically marked initial references
12.8 Grammar expresses social relations under the radar
13 Knowledge
13.1 Common ground
13.2 Sources of common ground
13.3 Fuel for Gricean amplicative inference
13.4 Grounding for inferring
13.5 Audience design
13.6 Affiliation and information
13.7 From information to social relations
Conclusion
References
Index
Introduction
1 Relationships
1.1 The data of relationships
1.2 Context
1.3 Relationship thinking
1.4 Enacting relationships and relationship types
1.5 Relationship-grounded society
2 Sociality
2.1 Human social intelligence
2.2 Social motivations
2.3 Tools for assessment and management
2.4 Semiotic process
2.5 Norms and heuristics
2.6 Communication as tool use
2.7 Two primitive imperatives for communication
3 Enchrony
3.1 Enchrony and its scope
3.2 Causal frames for understanding meaning
3.3 Normative organization
4 Semiosis
4.1 Anatomy of the semiotic process
4.2 Flexibility in semiotic processes
4.3 Inference as a semiotic process
4.4 Cultural epidemiology as a semiotic process
4.5 Elements of the semiotic process and their possibilities
4.6 Payoffs of this framework
4.7 The Saussurean sign: a convenient untruth
4.8 A frame-content dynamic
4.9 Meaning as a public process
5 Status
5.1 Status predicts and explains behavior
5.2 Entitlements, commitments, enablements
5.3 Relationships as statuses
6 Moves
6.1 Moves are composite signs
6.2 Composite utterances are interpreted as wholes
6.3 Turn-taking: moves in linguistic clothing
6.4 The move as a privileged level of semiosis
7 Cognition
7.1 Behavior-reading
7.2 Cognition and language
7.3 Psychology as interpretative heuristic
7.4 Fear of cognition?
8 Action
8.1 Natural action versus social action
8.2 Courses of action
8.3 Speech acts and actions-en
8.4 Categories of action-en?
8.5 A composite notion of actions-en
8.6 Ontology of actions-en
8.7 A generative account of action-en
9 Agency
9.1 Flexibility and accountability
9.2 Agent unity heuristic
9.3 Joint agency
9.4 Distributed agency
10 Asymmetry
10.1 Propositions and the relativity of knowledge
10.2 Epistemic Authority
10.3 Distribution of agency in practice
10.4 Sources of Asymmetry
10.5 Our imperfect communication system
11 Culture
11.1 Cultural systems
11.2 The Kri house as a system context for social relations
11.3 Ritual in communication
11.4 Kri residence
11.5 Practical interpretation of the Kri residence: to follow a norm
11.6 Spatial distribution and diagrammatic iconicity
11.7 Sanction of norms: making the tacit explicit
11.8 Everyday ritual and social relations
12 Grammar
12.1 Language as a system
12.2 Syntagmatic relations: grammar for turns
12.3 Paradigmatic relations in linguistic grammars
12.4 Markedness: special effects of choice within a system
12.5 The Lao system of person reference
12.6 Default reference to persons in Lao
12.7 Pragmatically marked initial references
12.8 Grammar expresses social relations under the radar
13 Knowledge
13.1 Common ground
13.2 Sources of common ground
13.3 Fuel for Gricean amplicative inference
13.4 Grounding for inferring
13.5 Audience design
13.6 Affiliation and information
13.7 From information to social relations
Conclusion
References
Index
1 Relationships
1.1 The data of relationships
1.2 Context
1.3 Relationship thinking
1.4 Enacting relationships and relationship types
1.5 Relationship-grounded society
2 Sociality
2.1 Human social intelligence
2.2 Social motivations
2.3 Tools for assessment and management
2.4 Semiotic process
2.5 Norms and heuristics
2.6 Communication as tool use
2.7 Two primitive imperatives for communication
3 Enchrony
3.1 Enchrony and its scope
3.2 Causal frames for understanding meaning
3.3 Normative organization
4 Semiosis
4.1 Anatomy of the semiotic process
4.2 Flexibility in semiotic processes
4.3 Inference as a semiotic process
4.4 Cultural epidemiology as a semiotic process
4.5 Elements of the semiotic process and their possibilities
4.6 Payoffs of this framework
4.7 The Saussurean sign: a convenient untruth
4.8 A frame-content dynamic
4.9 Meaning as a public process
5 Status
5.1 Status predicts and explains behavior
5.2 Entitlements, commitments, enablements
5.3 Relationships as statuses
6 Moves
6.1 Moves are composite signs
6.2 Composite utterances are interpreted as wholes
6.3 Turn-taking: moves in linguistic clothing
6.4 The move as a privileged level of semiosis
7 Cognition
7.1 Behavior-reading
7.2 Cognition and language
7.3 Psychology as interpretative heuristic
7.4 Fear of cognition?
8 Action
8.1 Natural action versus social action
8.2 Courses of action
8.3 Speech acts and actions-en
8.4 Categories of action-en?
8.5 A composite notion of actions-en
8.6 Ontology of actions-en
8.7 A generative account of action-en
9 Agency
9.1 Flexibility and accountability
9.2 Agent unity heuristic
9.3 Joint agency
9.4 Distributed agency
10 Asymmetry
10.1 Propositions and the relativity of knowledge
10.2 Epistemic Authority
10.3 Distribution of agency in practice
10.4 Sources of Asymmetry
10.5 Our imperfect communication system
11 Culture
11.1 Cultural systems
11.2 The Kri house as a system context for social relations
11.3 Ritual in communication
11.4 Kri residence
11.5 Practical interpretation of the Kri residence: to follow a norm
11.6 Spatial distribution and diagrammatic iconicity
11.7 Sanction of norms: making the tacit explicit
11.8 Everyday ritual and social relations
12 Grammar
12.1 Language as a system
12.2 Syntagmatic relations: grammar for turns
12.3 Paradigmatic relations in linguistic grammars
12.4 Markedness: special effects of choice within a system
12.5 The Lao system of person reference
12.6 Default reference to persons in Lao
12.7 Pragmatically marked initial references
12.8 Grammar expresses social relations under the radar
13 Knowledge
13.1 Common ground
13.2 Sources of common ground
13.3 Fuel for Gricean amplicative inference
13.4 Grounding for inferring
13.5 Audience design
13.6 Affiliation and information
13.7 From information to social relations
Conclusion
References
Index