Catalog Search
 
Advanced Search

My shopping cart cart icon
Your cart is empty

My wish list wishlist icon
Your wish list is empty



Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
Home

Rethinking Communicative Interaction

New interdisciplinary horizons

Cover image
Edited by Colin B. Grant
Heriot Watt University, Edinburgh

2003. viii, 330 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 5358 3 / EUR 115.00
978 1 58811 451 8 / USD 173.00
Add to shopping cart

e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9574 3 / EUR 115.00 / USD 173.00
Ordering information

Add to wish list

This volume breaks open traditional disciplinary confines and approaches the full complexity of communicative interaction from an impressive range of exciting state-of-the-art perspectives in social psychology, conversation analysis, hermeneutics, constructivist psychology, communication theory, computational neuroscience, sociology of communication, second language pragmatics, ergonomic interaction theory and computer-mediated interaction studies. In so doing, it sets out to establish a new research agenda in which communication science is understood as a human-social science par excellence. This collection of fifteen essays by seventeen scholars from Canada, the United States, Brazil, Ireland, the Netherlands, Germany and the UK will be of interest to scholars and students in all of the above fields.

The editor, Colin B. Grant, is Reader in Modern Languages in the School of Management and Languages, Heriot Watt University, Edinburgh, where he runs the interdisciplinary social communication science research group. He is author of Literary Communication from Consensus to Rupture (1995), Functions and Fictions of Communication (2000) and chief editor of Language-Meaning-Social Construction (2001).


Table of contents

List of contributors
vii
Introduction: Rethinking communicative interaction: An interdisciplinary programme
Colin B. Grant
1–26
Part I: Communicating the self
Dialogicality as an ontology of humanity
Ivana Marková
29–51
The subject as dialogical fiction
Nicholas Davey
53–67
Language, communication and the development of the self
Renato Proietti
69–85
Addressing oneself as another: Dialogue and the self in Habermas and Butler
Henderikus J. Stam
87–100
Complexities of self and social communication
Colin B. Grant
101–125
Part II: Constructing communication
Histories and discourses: An integrated approach to communication science
Siegfried J. Schmidt
129–144
Autonomy, self-reference and contingency in computational neuroscience
Bernd Porr and Florentin Wörgötter
145–161
Interaction versus action and Luhmann’s sociology of communication
Loet Leydesdorff
163–186
Pragmatic interactions in a second language
Beatriz Mariz Maia de Paiva
187–206
Part III: Communication environments
Between uniqueness and universality: An ethnomethodological analysis of language games
Brian Torode
209–234
The transition of a Scottish Young Persons’s Centre — a dialogical analysis
Kesi Mahendran
235–256
Conversational action: An ergonomic approach to interaction
Mario Cesar Vidal and Renato José Bonfatti
257–272
‘Flaming’ in computer-mediated interactions
Anthi Avgerinakou
273–293
Constructing the uncertainties of bioterror: A study of U.S. news reporting on the anthrax attack of fall, 2001
Austin Babrow and Mohan Dutta-Bergman
295–315
Index of names
317–319
Index of subjects
321–325


[...], the reader will no doubt find interesting insights on what communicative interaction is and on the different research areas that researchers have suggested in order to analyze this typically human activity.
Francisco Yus, University of Alicante, Spain