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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Epistemic Stance in English Conversation

A description of its interactional functions, with a focus on I think

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Elise Kärkkäinen
University of Oulu

2003. xii, 213 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 5357 6 / EUR 105.00
978 1 58811 444 0 / USD 158.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9594 1 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
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This book is the first corpus-based description of epistemic stance in conversational American English. It argues for epistemic stance as a pragmatic rather than semantic notion: showing commitment to the status of information is an emergent interactive activity, rooted in the interaction between conversational co-participants. The first major part of the book establishes the highly regular and routinized nature of such stance marking in the data. The second part offers a micro-analysis of I think, the prototypical stance marker, in its sequential and activity contexts. Adopting the methodology of conversation analysis and paying serious attention to the manifold prosodic cues attendant in the speakers’ utterances, the study offers novel situated interpretations of I think. The author also argues for intonation units as a unit of social interaction and makes observations about the grammaticization patterns of the most frequent epistemic markers, notably the status of I think as a discourse marker.


Table of contents

Acknowledgements
v
List of tables
xi
1. Introduction
1–16
2. Expression of epistemic stance: Preliminaries
17–28
3. The intonation unit as analytical unit
29–34
4. Routinization of stance marking at the linguistic and interactional level
35–103
5. Stance-taking as an interactive activity: The case of I think
105–182
6. Concluding remarks
183–187
References
189–198
Appendix
199–200
Name index
201–203
Subject index
205–207


ESEC is to be considered a welcome contribution to the literature on epistemic modality. Its main merit lies in the exploration of issues which have received scant attention, such as prosody, sequentiality and routinization. In all probability, ESEC will prove to be a seminal work [...]
Marta Carretero, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, in the Journal of Pragmatics, Vol. 38 (2006)

The book is clearly written, well argued with the right amount of data presented. It should appeal to a range of functional linguists, linguistically minded conversation analysts, and those interested in the linguistic expression of perspective.
Ilana Mushin, University of Queensland, Australia