Table of contents for Discourse and technology : multimodal discourse analysis / Philip LeVine and Ron Scollon, editors.


Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog. Note: Contents data are machine generated based on pre-publication information provided by the publisher. Contents may have variations from the printed book or be incomplete or contain other coding.


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Contents
Chapter One: Ron Scollon and Philip LeVine. Multimodal discourse analysis as the confluence of discourse and technology
Chapter Two: Theo Van Leeuwen. Ten reasons why linguists should pay attention to visual communication.
Chapter Three: Rodney H. Jones. The problem of context in computer mediated 
communication.
Chapter Four: Angela Goddard. 'The way to write a phone call': Multimodality in novices' use and perceptions of interactive written discourse (IWD).
Chapter Five: Boyd Davis and Peyton Mason. Trying on voices: Using questions to establish authority, identity, and recipient design in electronic discourse. 
Chapter Six: Hsi-Yao Su. Mock Taiwanese-accented Mandarin in the internet 
community in Taiwan: The interaction between technology, linguistic practice, and language ideologies.
Chapter Seven: Ingrid de Saint-Georges. Materiality in discourse: The influence of space and layout in making meaning.
Chapter Eight: Laurent Filliettaz. The multimodal negotiation of service encounters.
Chapter Nine: Sigrid Norris. Multimodal discourse analysis: A conceptual framework.
Chapter Ten: Alexandra Johnston. Files, forms and fonts: Mediational means and identity negotiation in immigration interviews.
Chapter Eleven: Elisa Everts. Modalities of turn-taking in blind/sighted interaction: Better to be seen and not heard?
Chapter Twelve: Elaine K. Yakura. "Informed consent" and other ethical conundrums in videotaping interactions.
Chapter Thirteen: Lilie Chouliaraki. The moral spectator: Distant suffering in the September 11th live footage.
Chapter Fourteen: Joel Kuipers. Ethnography of language in the age of video: "Voices" as multimodal constructions in some contexts of religious and clinical authority.
Chapter Fifteen: Carey Jewitt. Multimodality and new communication technologies.
Chapter Sixteen: Frederick Erickson. Origins: A brief intellectual and technological history of the emergence of multimodal discourse analysis.
Chapter Seventeen: Marilyn Whalen and Jack Whalen with Robert Moore, Geoff 
Raymond, Margaret Szymanski, and Erik Vinkhuyzen. Studying workscapes.




Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication: Discourse analysis, Technological innovations, Interactive multimedia, Multimedia systems