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Contents Chapter 1 Introduction 1.0 Introduction: media discourse 2.0 Media interactions and casual conversation 3.0 Overview of chapters Chapter 2 A framework for analyzing media discourse 2.0 Introduction 2.1 Towards a model for dyadic communication 2.2 Media interactions, institutionalized generic structure and genre 2.3 Utterance, genres and generic blends 2.4 Towards a working definition of genre for investigating media discourse 2.5 Generic activity, intertextuality and interdiscursivity 2.6 Media discourse as a generic structure with a socially binding forum 2.7 Conclusion Chapter 3 - Review of methodologies for analyzing media discourse 3.0 Introduction 3.1 Categorising media interactions 3.2 Conversation analysis 3.3 Interactions with unknown personae 3.4 Interactions with known personae 3.5 Political interviews 3.6 A corpus-based approach 3.7 Integrating approaches 3.8 Conclusion Chapter 4 Managing the discourse 4.0 Introduction 4.1 The discoursal roles and personae of the media presenter 4.2 The media presenter within the participation framework 4.3 Responsibility for common ground 4.4 Institutional power roles and questioning 4.5 Management and control: within and beyond syntax 4.6 Conclusion Chapter 5 Creating and sustaining pseudo-relationships 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Simulating intimacy between strangers in media discourse 5.3 Markers of pseudo-intimacy in media discourse 5.4 Conclusion Chapter 6 Creating identities 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Vague categorisation as indices of shared knowledge 6.3 Pronouns as indices of audience identity 6.4 Self-reference 6.5 Conclusion Chapter 7 Conclusion 7.1 Introduction 7.2. Media interactions take place within a participation framework 7.3 Media interactions require an eclectic approach 7.3 Media interactions are not homogenous Bibliographical references
Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication:
Mass media and language -- Research -- Methodology.
Discourse analysis -- Research -- Methodology.