Discursive Self in Microblogging. Speech acts, stories and self-praise

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Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2016. — 259 p.
This volume examines the language of microblogs drawing on the example of a group of eleven users who are united by their interest in ballet as a physical activity and an art form. The book reports on a three and a half year study which complemented a 20,000 word corpus of tweets with semi-structured interviews and participant observation. It deals with two main questions: how users exploit the linguistic resources at their disposal to build a certain identity, and how the community boundaries are performed discursively. The focus is on the speech acts of self-praise and complaint, and on the storytelling practices of microbloggers. The comprehensive treatment of the speech act theory and the social psychological approaches to self-disclosure provides a stepping stone to the analysis of identity work, for which the users draw on two distinctive interpretive repertoires – affiliative and self-promoting.

Author(s): Dayter D.

Language: English
Commentary: 1937791
Tags: Языки и языкознание;Лингвистика;Язык Интернета