Federico Pio Gentile
Corpora, Corpses and Corps (eBook, PDF)
A Multimodal Study of Contemporary Canadian TV Crime Series
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Federico Pio Gentile
Corpora, Corpses and Corps (eBook, PDF)
A Multimodal Study of Contemporary Canadian TV Crime Series
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This book uses corpus and multimodal methods to present a comparative study of three major Canadian TV crime series, Flashpoint (2008-2010) , Motive (2013-2015) and 19-2 (2014-2016), paying special attention to cinematic techniques. Following an overview of the methodology and the Canadian cultural milieu of the study, the author approaches the three series as complex cultural and linguistic productions that depend heavily on a national appropriation of a genre whose popularity is growing internationally. The book investigates the verbal, nonverbal and paraverbal strategies employed by each…mehr
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This book uses corpus and multimodal methods to present a comparative study of three major Canadian TV crime series, Flashpoint (2008-2010) , Motive (2013-2015) and 19-2 (2014-2016), paying special attention to cinematic techniques. Following an overview of the methodology and the Canadian cultural milieu of the study, the author approaches the three series as complex cultural and linguistic productions that depend heavily on a national appropriation of a genre whose popularity is growing internationally. The book investigates the verbal, nonverbal and paraverbal strategies employed by each production to create the patterns that make this genre appealing to a variety of audiences, and uncovers some of the psychological processes at work in contemporary Canadian TV crime serials. This book will be of interest to scholars in fields including Corpus Linguistics, Multimodal Studies, Canadian Studies, Media and Communication Studies, and Specialised Discourse.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Springer International Publishing
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. September 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9783030782764
- Artikelnr.: 62552598
- Verlag: Springer International Publishing
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. September 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9783030782764
- Artikelnr.: 62552598
Federico Pio Gentile holds a PhD in English Linguistics from the Department of Literary, Linguistic and Comparative Studies at the University of Naples “L’Orientale”, Italy. His main research interests include Multimodality, Media Studies, Canadian Studies, Specialised Discourse and Translation. He is the author of La linguistica del delitto. Maureen Jennings e il caso di ‘Poor Tom is Cold’, tra formulaicità e traduzione (2015), and translated the science fiction novel Embassytown by China Miéville (2016). He co-edited Translating LSP in Literature through a Gender Perspective (22(2)), a special issue of Anglistica AION an interdisciplinary journal, and has published articles in national and international journals.
1. Introduction. Communication as a Quibbling Concept
References
2. The Research Methodology. Corpus Linguistics as a Methodological Tool Transcript Process and Tagging Tools Multimodality and the Extra-Linguistic Gap Annotation Procedure Beyond the Screen: Film Studies, Language and Communication Naturalness vs. Forgery: Cinematic Language Comprehension Specialised Discourse Conveyance and Popularised Knowledge Appraisal References
3. The Linguistic and Cultural Environment of Canadian Television. Television as a Medium The Power of Media over the Masses Media Ecology and Regulation Policies The Canadian Television Background The ‘Cancon’ Contemporary Context
Crime Genre and Television Seriality References
4. Flashpoint as in-Group Psychological and Action Narrative. The Broadcast 110 The Flashpoint Visual Narrative The Flashpoint Corpus Structure Communication in the Flashpoint TV Series Narrativity and Popularisation The Vocative Function Tactics Weaponry Occurrence Localisation Operations The Psychological Communication Slant Psychology and Profiling The Flashpoint Corpus Results References
5. The Motive 'Whydunit' Television Hybrid. The Broadcast
The Motive Narrative Core
The Motive Corpus Structure
The Motive TV Series Language(s)
The Characters’ Portrayal
Procedural Language: The Whydunnit Reconstructive
Approach to Homicides
Interrogation Room Talks
The Crime Scene Dialogues
Who’s Killing the Killstreak?
The Motive Forensics: Language, Discourse and Terminology
The Medical Communication Supports
IT and Finances
The Legal Context Crystallised Praxis
Observation
The Motive Corpus Results
References
6. The 19-2 Anglified Police Procedural Noir. The 19-2 Corpus Structure The Broadcast The 19-2 Expressive Spectum Procedural Language: Authority Misdemeanours Citywide Specialised Knowledge, Subcodes and Popularisation The Linguistic Characterisation Lingo, Slang and Jargon The 19-2 Corpus Results References
7. Contrastive Analysis and Results. Normalisation and Speech Performance Metrics The Languages of the Corpora Popularised Knowledge, Natural Language and Characterisation Blend Narrating the Corpora Visual and Acoustic Dimensions The Canadian Contemporary TV Crime Drama References
8. Concluding Remarks. References
References
2. The Research Methodology. Corpus Linguistics as a Methodological Tool Transcript Process and Tagging Tools Multimodality and the Extra-Linguistic Gap Annotation Procedure Beyond the Screen: Film Studies, Language and Communication Naturalness vs. Forgery: Cinematic Language Comprehension Specialised Discourse Conveyance and Popularised Knowledge Appraisal References
3. The Linguistic and Cultural Environment of Canadian Television. Television as a Medium The Power of Media over the Masses Media Ecology and Regulation Policies The Canadian Television Background The ‘Cancon’ Contemporary Context
Crime Genre and Television Seriality References
4. Flashpoint as in-Group Psychological and Action Narrative. The Broadcast 110 The Flashpoint Visual Narrative The Flashpoint Corpus Structure Communication in the Flashpoint TV Series Narrativity and Popularisation The Vocative Function Tactics Weaponry Occurrence Localisation Operations The Psychological Communication Slant Psychology and Profiling The Flashpoint Corpus Results References
5. The Motive 'Whydunit' Television Hybrid. The Broadcast
The Motive Narrative Core
The Motive Corpus Structure
The Motive TV Series Language(s)
The Characters’ Portrayal
Procedural Language: The Whydunnit Reconstructive
Approach to Homicides
Interrogation Room Talks
The Crime Scene Dialogues
Who’s Killing the Killstreak?
The Motive Forensics: Language, Discourse and Terminology
The Medical Communication Supports
IT and Finances
The Legal Context Crystallised Praxis
Observation
The Motive Corpus Results
References
6. The 19-2 Anglified Police Procedural Noir. The 19-2 Corpus Structure The Broadcast The 19-2 Expressive Spectum Procedural Language: Authority Misdemeanours Citywide Specialised Knowledge, Subcodes and Popularisation The Linguistic Characterisation Lingo, Slang and Jargon The 19-2 Corpus Results References
7. Contrastive Analysis and Results. Normalisation and Speech Performance Metrics The Languages of the Corpora Popularised Knowledge, Natural Language and Characterisation Blend Narrating the Corpora Visual and Acoustic Dimensions The Canadian Contemporary TV Crime Drama References
8. Concluding Remarks. References
1. Introduction.Communication as a Quibbling Concept
References
2. The Research Methodology.Corpus Linguistics as a Methodological ToolTranscript Process and Tagging ToolsMultimodality and the Extra-Linguistic GapAnnotation ProcedureBeyond the Screen: Film Studies, Language and CommunicationNaturalness vs. Forgery: Cinematic Language ComprehensionSpecialised Discourse Conveyance and Popularised Knowledge AppraisalReferences
3. The Linguistic and Cultural Environment of Canadian Television.Television as a MediumThe Power of Media over the MassesMedia Ecology and Regulation PoliciesThe Canadian Television BackgroundThe 'Cancon' Contemporary Context
Crime Genre and Television SerialityReferences
4. Flashpoint as in-Group Psychological and Action Narrative.The Broadcast 110 The Flashpoint Visual NarrativeThe Flashpoint Corpus StructureCommunication in the Flashpoint TV SeriesNarrativity and PopularisationThe Vocative FunctionTacticsWeaponry OccurrenceLocalisation OperationsThe Psychological Communication SlantPsychology and ProfilingThe Flashpoint Corpus ResultsReferences
5. The Motive 'Whydunit' Television Hybrid.The Broadcast
The Motive Narrative Core
The Motive Corpus Structure
The Motive TV Series Language(s)
The Characters' Portrayal
Procedural Language: The Whydunnit Reconstructive
Approach to Homicides
Interrogation Room Talks
The Crime Scene Dialogues
Who's Killing the Killstreak?
The Motive Forensics: Language, Discourse and Terminology
The Medical Communication Supports
IT and Finances
The Legal Context Crystallised Praxis
Observation
The Motive Corpus Results
References
6. The 19-2 Anglified Police Procedural Noir.The 19-2 Corpus StructureThe BroadcastThe 19-2 Expressive SpectumProcedural Language: AuthorityMisdemeanours CitywideSpecialised Knowledge, Subcodes and PopularisationThe Linguistic CharacterisationLingo, Slang and JargonThe 19-2 Corpus ResultsReferences
7. Contrastive Analysis and Results.Normalisation and Speech Performance MetricsThe Languages of the CorporaPopularised Knowledge, Natural Language and Characterisation BlendNarrating the Corpora Visual and Acoustic DimensionsThe Canadian Contemporary TV Crime DramaReferences
8. Concluding Remarks.References
References
2. The Research Methodology.Corpus Linguistics as a Methodological ToolTranscript Process and Tagging ToolsMultimodality and the Extra-Linguistic GapAnnotation ProcedureBeyond the Screen: Film Studies, Language and CommunicationNaturalness vs. Forgery: Cinematic Language ComprehensionSpecialised Discourse Conveyance and Popularised Knowledge AppraisalReferences
3. The Linguistic and Cultural Environment of Canadian Television.Television as a MediumThe Power of Media over the MassesMedia Ecology and Regulation PoliciesThe Canadian Television BackgroundThe 'Cancon' Contemporary Context
Crime Genre and Television SerialityReferences
4. Flashpoint as in-Group Psychological and Action Narrative.The Broadcast 110 The Flashpoint Visual NarrativeThe Flashpoint Corpus StructureCommunication in the Flashpoint TV SeriesNarrativity and PopularisationThe Vocative FunctionTacticsWeaponry OccurrenceLocalisation OperationsThe Psychological Communication SlantPsychology and ProfilingThe Flashpoint Corpus ResultsReferences
5. The Motive 'Whydunit' Television Hybrid.The Broadcast
The Motive Narrative Core
The Motive Corpus Structure
The Motive TV Series Language(s)
The Characters' Portrayal
Procedural Language: The Whydunnit Reconstructive
Approach to Homicides
Interrogation Room Talks
The Crime Scene Dialogues
Who's Killing the Killstreak?
The Motive Forensics: Language, Discourse and Terminology
The Medical Communication Supports
IT and Finances
The Legal Context Crystallised Praxis
Observation
The Motive Corpus Results
References
6. The 19-2 Anglified Police Procedural Noir.The 19-2 Corpus StructureThe BroadcastThe 19-2 Expressive SpectumProcedural Language: AuthorityMisdemeanours CitywideSpecialised Knowledge, Subcodes and PopularisationThe Linguistic CharacterisationLingo, Slang and JargonThe 19-2 Corpus ResultsReferences
7. Contrastive Analysis and Results.Normalisation and Speech Performance MetricsThe Languages of the CorporaPopularised Knowledge, Natural Language and Characterisation BlendNarrating the Corpora Visual and Acoustic DimensionsThe Canadian Contemporary TV Crime DramaReferences
8. Concluding Remarks.References
1. Introduction. Communication as a Quibbling Concept
References
2. The Research Methodology. Corpus Linguistics as a Methodological Tool Transcript Process and Tagging Tools Multimodality and the Extra-Linguistic Gap Annotation Procedure Beyond the Screen: Film Studies, Language and Communication Naturalness vs. Forgery: Cinematic Language Comprehension Specialised Discourse Conveyance and Popularised Knowledge Appraisal References
3. The Linguistic and Cultural Environment of Canadian Television. Television as a Medium The Power of Media over the Masses Media Ecology and Regulation Policies The Canadian Television Background The ‘Cancon’ Contemporary Context
Crime Genre and Television Seriality References
4. Flashpoint as in-Group Psychological and Action Narrative. The Broadcast 110 The Flashpoint Visual Narrative The Flashpoint Corpus Structure Communication in the Flashpoint TV Series Narrativity and Popularisation The Vocative Function Tactics Weaponry Occurrence Localisation Operations The Psychological Communication Slant Psychology and Profiling The Flashpoint Corpus Results References
5. The Motive 'Whydunit' Television Hybrid. The Broadcast
The Motive Narrative Core
The Motive Corpus Structure
The Motive TV Series Language(s)
The Characters’ Portrayal
Procedural Language: The Whydunnit Reconstructive
Approach to Homicides
Interrogation Room Talks
The Crime Scene Dialogues
Who’s Killing the Killstreak?
The Motive Forensics: Language, Discourse and Terminology
The Medical Communication Supports
IT and Finances
The Legal Context Crystallised Praxis
Observation
The Motive Corpus Results
References
6. The 19-2 Anglified Police Procedural Noir. The 19-2 Corpus Structure The Broadcast The 19-2 Expressive Spectum Procedural Language: Authority Misdemeanours Citywide Specialised Knowledge, Subcodes and Popularisation The Linguistic Characterisation Lingo, Slang and Jargon The 19-2 Corpus Results References
7. Contrastive Analysis and Results. Normalisation and Speech Performance Metrics The Languages of the Corpora Popularised Knowledge, Natural Language and Characterisation Blend Narrating the Corpora Visual and Acoustic Dimensions The Canadian Contemporary TV Crime Drama References
8. Concluding Remarks. References
References
2. The Research Methodology. Corpus Linguistics as a Methodological Tool Transcript Process and Tagging Tools Multimodality and the Extra-Linguistic Gap Annotation Procedure Beyond the Screen: Film Studies, Language and Communication Naturalness vs. Forgery: Cinematic Language Comprehension Specialised Discourse Conveyance and Popularised Knowledge Appraisal References
3. The Linguistic and Cultural Environment of Canadian Television. Television as a Medium The Power of Media over the Masses Media Ecology and Regulation Policies The Canadian Television Background The ‘Cancon’ Contemporary Context
Crime Genre and Television Seriality References
4. Flashpoint as in-Group Psychological and Action Narrative. The Broadcast 110 The Flashpoint Visual Narrative The Flashpoint Corpus Structure Communication in the Flashpoint TV Series Narrativity and Popularisation The Vocative Function Tactics Weaponry Occurrence Localisation Operations The Psychological Communication Slant Psychology and Profiling The Flashpoint Corpus Results References
5. The Motive 'Whydunit' Television Hybrid. The Broadcast
The Motive Narrative Core
The Motive Corpus Structure
The Motive TV Series Language(s)
The Characters’ Portrayal
Procedural Language: The Whydunnit Reconstructive
Approach to Homicides
Interrogation Room Talks
The Crime Scene Dialogues
Who’s Killing the Killstreak?
The Motive Forensics: Language, Discourse and Terminology
The Medical Communication Supports
IT and Finances
The Legal Context Crystallised Praxis
Observation
The Motive Corpus Results
References
6. The 19-2 Anglified Police Procedural Noir. The 19-2 Corpus Structure The Broadcast The 19-2 Expressive Spectum Procedural Language: Authority Misdemeanours Citywide Specialised Knowledge, Subcodes and Popularisation The Linguistic Characterisation Lingo, Slang and Jargon The 19-2 Corpus Results References
7. Contrastive Analysis and Results. Normalisation and Speech Performance Metrics The Languages of the Corpora Popularised Knowledge, Natural Language and Characterisation Blend Narrating the Corpora Visual and Acoustic Dimensions The Canadian Contemporary TV Crime Drama References
8. Concluding Remarks. References
1. Introduction.Communication as a Quibbling Concept
References
2. The Research Methodology.Corpus Linguistics as a Methodological ToolTranscript Process and Tagging ToolsMultimodality and the Extra-Linguistic GapAnnotation ProcedureBeyond the Screen: Film Studies, Language and CommunicationNaturalness vs. Forgery: Cinematic Language ComprehensionSpecialised Discourse Conveyance and Popularised Knowledge AppraisalReferences
3. The Linguistic and Cultural Environment of Canadian Television.Television as a MediumThe Power of Media over the MassesMedia Ecology and Regulation PoliciesThe Canadian Television BackgroundThe 'Cancon' Contemporary Context
Crime Genre and Television SerialityReferences
4. Flashpoint as in-Group Psychological and Action Narrative.The Broadcast 110 The Flashpoint Visual NarrativeThe Flashpoint Corpus StructureCommunication in the Flashpoint TV SeriesNarrativity and PopularisationThe Vocative FunctionTacticsWeaponry OccurrenceLocalisation OperationsThe Psychological Communication SlantPsychology and ProfilingThe Flashpoint Corpus ResultsReferences
5. The Motive 'Whydunit' Television Hybrid.The Broadcast
The Motive Narrative Core
The Motive Corpus Structure
The Motive TV Series Language(s)
The Characters' Portrayal
Procedural Language: The Whydunnit Reconstructive
Approach to Homicides
Interrogation Room Talks
The Crime Scene Dialogues
Who's Killing the Killstreak?
The Motive Forensics: Language, Discourse and Terminology
The Medical Communication Supports
IT and Finances
The Legal Context Crystallised Praxis
Observation
The Motive Corpus Results
References
6. The 19-2 Anglified Police Procedural Noir.The 19-2 Corpus StructureThe BroadcastThe 19-2 Expressive SpectumProcedural Language: AuthorityMisdemeanours CitywideSpecialised Knowledge, Subcodes and PopularisationThe Linguistic CharacterisationLingo, Slang and JargonThe 19-2 Corpus ResultsReferences
7. Contrastive Analysis and Results.Normalisation and Speech Performance MetricsThe Languages of the CorporaPopularised Knowledge, Natural Language and Characterisation BlendNarrating the Corpora Visual and Acoustic DimensionsThe Canadian Contemporary TV Crime DramaReferences
8. Concluding Remarks.References
References
2. The Research Methodology.Corpus Linguistics as a Methodological ToolTranscript Process and Tagging ToolsMultimodality and the Extra-Linguistic GapAnnotation ProcedureBeyond the Screen: Film Studies, Language and CommunicationNaturalness vs. Forgery: Cinematic Language ComprehensionSpecialised Discourse Conveyance and Popularised Knowledge AppraisalReferences
3. The Linguistic and Cultural Environment of Canadian Television.Television as a MediumThe Power of Media over the MassesMedia Ecology and Regulation PoliciesThe Canadian Television BackgroundThe 'Cancon' Contemporary Context
Crime Genre and Television SerialityReferences
4. Flashpoint as in-Group Psychological and Action Narrative.The Broadcast 110 The Flashpoint Visual NarrativeThe Flashpoint Corpus StructureCommunication in the Flashpoint TV SeriesNarrativity and PopularisationThe Vocative FunctionTacticsWeaponry OccurrenceLocalisation OperationsThe Psychological Communication SlantPsychology and ProfilingThe Flashpoint Corpus ResultsReferences
5. The Motive 'Whydunit' Television Hybrid.The Broadcast
The Motive Narrative Core
The Motive Corpus Structure
The Motive TV Series Language(s)
The Characters' Portrayal
Procedural Language: The Whydunnit Reconstructive
Approach to Homicides
Interrogation Room Talks
The Crime Scene Dialogues
Who's Killing the Killstreak?
The Motive Forensics: Language, Discourse and Terminology
The Medical Communication Supports
IT and Finances
The Legal Context Crystallised Praxis
Observation
The Motive Corpus Results
References
6. The 19-2 Anglified Police Procedural Noir.The 19-2 Corpus StructureThe BroadcastThe 19-2 Expressive SpectumProcedural Language: AuthorityMisdemeanours CitywideSpecialised Knowledge, Subcodes and PopularisationThe Linguistic CharacterisationLingo, Slang and JargonThe 19-2 Corpus ResultsReferences
7. Contrastive Analysis and Results.Normalisation and Speech Performance MetricsThe Languages of the CorporaPopularised Knowledge, Natural Language and Characterisation BlendNarrating the Corpora Visual and Acoustic DimensionsThe Canadian Contemporary TV Crime DramaReferences
8. Concluding Remarks.References