資料來源: Google Book
Electronic discourse :linguistic individuals in virtual space
- 作者: Davis, Boyd H.
- 其他作者: Brewer, Jeutonne P.
- 出版: Albany : State University of New York Press ©1997.
- 稽核項: 1 online resource (xv, 217 pages) :illustrations.
- 叢書名: SUNY series in computer-mediated communication
- 標題: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES , Vocabulary. , Analyse du discours Informatique. , Informatique. , REFERENCE. , LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Vocabulary. , Discourse analysis , Electronic books. , Analyse du discours , Discourse analysis Data processing. , Data processing.
- ISBN: 1438400578 , 9781438400570
- ISBN: 0791434753 , 0791434761
- 試查全文@TNUA:
- 附註: Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-207) and index.
- 電子資源: https://dbs.tnua.edu.tw/login?url=https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=5396
- 系統號: 005282198
- 資料類型: 電子書
- 讀者標籤: 需登入
- 引用網址: 複製連結
This book examines interactive electronic discourse, exposing use of language that has the immediacy characteristic of speech and the permanence characteristic of writing. The authors created an asynchronous mainframe conference for language and linguistics classes in which they presented students with the task of analyzing the language used in original newspaper reports of the 1960s Civil Rights Sit-Ins. The authors observed how students wrote to each other across a wide range of social and virtual settings, how they built a real, if short-lived community within and across campus boundaries, and how they handled conflict while avoiding confrontation on sensitive issues of race and power. The result is a study that details how people use language when their social interaction is exclusively enacted through text on screens, and how their exchange is affected by computer conferencing. The students who wrote in the electronic conferences faced two interrelated tasks: participating in a multiparty "conversation" and negotiating the individual identities they presented to one another in their virtual space. Individual writers used their own idiolects to influence the form and content of electronic discourse, adapting their own tacit knowledge of conversational strategies and written discourse to the new medium, as they created a real, although temporary, community. In the electronic universe, writers adapt conventions of oral and written discourse to their own individual communicative ends. Electronic discourse, sometimes called computer mediated communication, presents us with texts in contact, and through those texts, their writers. Intertextuality in electronic conferences replaced a variety of conversational conventions. This book examines evidence for change, some trace of being and human interaction in virtual space, a domain where footprints are not in moondust but in ether.
來源: Google Book
來源: Google Book
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