دانلود کتاب A Genre Based Approach to Daytime Talk on Television.
by Gregori-Signes, Carmen
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عنوان فارسی: یک نوع رویکرد مبتنی بر به روز بحث در تلویزیون. |
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جزییات کتاب
1. The first reason was to find out the means by which language is used to
manipulate people as well as ideology and social structure: the Tabloid Talkshow,
because of its topics and participants can be said to be a conflictive scenario
which brings out ideologies that are not socially acceptable.
2. The second reason was more related to the view of the Tabloid Talkshow
as a mass communication and socio-cultural phenomenon and concerned the
task of showing the inside of a genre that is growing in popularity and has been
exported to and copied by other countries. Hence, with hindsight it would be
interesting to analyse and evaluate this international evolution as compared with
Tabloid Talkshows in the US, where they originated. As Fairclough (1994:1)
claims "consciousness is the first step towards emancipation."
3. The third reason was that talkshows, in general, are social processes that
unfold linguistically as texts (cf. Ventola 1987:3), and as such they could well
be used in language pedagogy and culture and media studies.
My purpose in writing this book is more related, however, to the third reason.
I am specifically interested in looking at the way talk is organised in Tabloid
Talkshows, and in how participants "talk an institution into being" (Heritage
1984:290). I will provide a description of the distribution of talk among the
different categories participating in the Tabloid Talkshow, in order to find out
the possible asymetries and the constraints on the types of contributions that the
genre conventions impose on the participants.
The analytical approach taken is based on a dynamic view of genre already
expressed by Hymes (1972). Hymes (1972), as quoted by McCarthy (1998)
"stresses the dynamic characteristic of genres and separates them from the
speech event itself: i.e., a genre may coincide with a speech event, but genres
can also occur within speech events, and the same genre can show variation in
different speech events." McCarthy argues in favour of such a view of spoken
genres and states that "genre is a useful concept that captures the recurrent, differing
social compacts (i.e. co-operative sets of behaviour) that participants enter
upon in unfolding discourse processes, whether in speaking or writing."