Discourse Processes 2016:53:1-2

2016-01-27

2016



Discourse Processes

Volume 53 – Issue 1-2 – 2016

Special Issue: Apologies in Discourse



Price: 800 Toman

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Original Articles

Introduction

01–Introduction to the Special Issue on Apologies in Discourse –Paul Drew, Alexa Hepburn, Piera Margutti & Renata Galatolo

Articles

02–Are Explicit Apologies Proportional to the Offenses They Address? –John Heritage & Chase Wesley Raymond

03–Responsibility and Culpability in Apologies: Distinctive Uses of “Sorry” versus “I’m Sorry” in Apologizing –Marilena Fatigante, Federica Biassoni, Francesca Marazzini & Pierangela Diadori

04–“Oh” + Apology + Solution: A Practice for Managing the Concomitant Presence of a Possible Offense and a Problem-to-be-Solved – Marco Pino, Loredana Pozzuoli, Ilaria Riccioni & Valentine Castellarin

05–I’m Sorry “About That”: Apologies, Indexicals, and (Unnamed) Offenses — Piera Margutti, Véronique Traverso & Rosa Pugliese

06–“I’m Sorry + Naming the Offense”: A Format for Apologizing — Letizia Cirillo, Isabel Colón de Carvajal & Anna Claudia Ticca

07–Parasitic Apologies – Renata Galatolo, Biagio Ursi & Ramona Bongelli

08–Absent Apologies – Paul Drew & Alexa Hepburn



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Discourse Processes is a multidisciplinary journal providing a forum for cross-fertilization of ideas from diverse disciplines sharing a common interest in discourse–prose comprehension and recall, dialogue analysis, text grammar construction, computer simulation of natural language, cross-cultural comparisons of communicative competence, or related topics. The problems posed by multisentence contexts and the methods required to investigate them, although not always unique to discourse, are sufficiently distinct so as to require an organized mode of scientific interaction made possible through the journal.

The journal accepts original experimental or theoretical papers that substantially advance understanding of the structure and function of discourse. Scholars working in the discourse area from the perspective of sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, discourse psychology, text linguistics, ethnomethodology and sociology of language, education, philosophy of language, computer science, and related subareas are invited to contribute.



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