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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Emotive Communication in Japanese

Edited by Satoko Suzuki
Macalester College

2006. x, 234 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 5394 1 / EUR 110.00 / USD 165.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9286 5 / EUR 110.00 / USD 165.00
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It has become well recognized that affective dimensions of language constitute an integral part of the linguistic system. Japanese provides a prime example of the significance of emotivity as it has grammaticalized a wide variety of expressions to communicate affective information. The collected articles demonstrate the rich diversity of emotive communication in Japanese and analyze various expressions with theoretical perspectives that are often independent from Western models. This volume reflects the influence of traditional Japanese scholars for whom examining affective-relational aspects of language has long been a central concern. The authors are also influenced by more recent scholars in Japanese pragmatics such as Susumu Kuno, Akio Kamio, and Senko K. Maynard. They also draw on anthropological notions such as the inside vs. outside dichotomy that have been used to describe Japanese society.


Table of contents

List of contributors
vii–ix
Emotive Communciation in Japanese: An Introduction
Satoko Suzuki
1–13
Subjectivity, Intersubjectivity, and Grammaticalization
Rumiko Shinzato
15–33
How does ‘reason’ become less and less reasonable? Pragmatics of the utterance-final wake in conversational discourse
Ryoko Suzuki
35–51
Quoted thought and speech using the m itai-na ‘be-like’ noun-modifying construction
Seiko Fujii
53–95
Mo than expected: From textual to expressive with an Old Japanese clitic
Charles J. Quinn, Jr.
97–137
An emotively motivated post-predicate constituent order in a ‘strict predicate final’ language: Emotion and grammar meet in Japanese everyday talk
Tsuyoshi Ono
139–153
Surprise and disapproval: On how societal views of the outside correlate with linguistic expressions
Satoko Suzuki
155–171
Overt anaphoric expressions, empathy, and the uchi-soto distinction: A contrastive perspective
Kaoru Horie, Miya Shimura and Prashant Pardeshi
173–190
Territory of information theory and emotive expressions in Japanese: A case observed in s hiranai and w akaranai
Kiri Lee
191–207
Embedded soliloquy and affective stances in Japanese
Yoko Hasegawa
209–229
Index
231–234