Christine Christie • Gender and Language
Towards a Feminist PragmaticsGender and Language introduces an approach to the study of language use that explores the relationship between meaning generation and gender. Aimed at an interdisciplinary audience the book is both an accessible introductory text for students and an original contribution to current academicdebates in feminism, gender theory, discourse analysis and linguistics.
The book also shows how the insights offered by pragmatic analyses can inform debates surrounding the linguistic construction of gender.
Each pragmatic approach is carefully explained and illustrated using practical examples that show how pragmatics can inform feminist analyses of naturally occurring language use across a range of contexts, including news texts, informal conversation, institutional dialogue and political discourse. Gender and Language demonstrates how the application of pragmatic concepts - such as entailment, presupposition, implicature and textual coherence - provides insights into the way that gender is implicated in meaning generation, and the way that language functions generally in relation toits socio-culturally situated users.
Gender and Languageis the first pragmatic approach to the study of gender and language use.
Christine Christie offers a systematic introduction to pragmatic approaches such as relevance theory, speech act theory, and politeness theory.
The book demonstrates how the application of pragmatic concepts provides insights into the way that gender is implicated in meaning generation.
This work introduces an approach to the study of language use that enables the relationship between meaning generation and gender to be explored. It presents a systematic look at pragmatic approaches such as relevance theory, speech act theory and politeness theory, introducing the reader to a series of analytical tools such as entailment, presupposition, implicature and textual coherence.
Edinburgh University Press, english, Paperback, 202 pages