Buch, Englisch, Band 64, 327 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 230 mm, Gewicht: 708 g
Reihe: Language and Computers
Corpus Linguistics and Society
Buch, Englisch, Band 64, 327 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 230 mm, Gewicht: 708 g
Reihe: Language and Computers
ISBN: 978-90-420-2350-5
Verlag: Brill | Rodopi
Continually improving technological development facilitates the design of larger and more comprehensive corpora documenting language use in a multitude of genres, styles and modes, even starting to include visual aspects. Software to investigate these data also becomes increasingly powerful and more refined.
The sixteen original articles in this volume cover substantial ground on both the theoretical as well as applied levels. Having such data and software resources at their disposal, the contributing researchers rethink the long discussed interplay between language system and use from various angles, considering socio-cultural and cognitive involvement and representation, with synchronic as well as diachronic perspectives in view.
These theories and quantitative / qualitative methods are applied to a range of topics from language acquisition and teaching to literature and politics. All of the authors in this volume reveal the profound and leading impact that Mike Stubb’s work has continued to contribute to the field of corpus-based description of language structure, use and function.
Weitere Infos & Material
Oliver MASON and Andrea GERBIG: Introduction
Contributing authors
Michael W. Stubbs – a select bibliography
Susan HUNSTON: Michael Stubbs: a theoretician of applied linguistics
John SINCLAIR: Borrowed ideas
Robert de BEAUGRANDE: How ‘systemic’ is a large corpus of English
Wolfgang TEUBERT: Some notes on the concept of cognitive linguistics
Michael BYRAM: Developing language education policy in Europe – and searching for theory
Wolfgang KÜHLWEIN: The semiotic patterning of Cædmon’s Hymn as a ‘hypersign’
David A. REIBEL: Traditional grammar and corpus linguistics ‘with critical notes’
Andrea GERBIG: Travelogues in time and space: a diachronic and intercultural genre study
Naomi HALLAN: An extended view of extended lexical units: tracking development and use
Bettina STARCKE: I don’t know- differences in patterns of collocation and semantic prosody in phrases of different lengths
Hans LINDQUIST: Stubbing your toe against a hard mass of facts: corpus data and the phraseology of STUB and TOE
Oliver MASON: Stringing together a sentence: linearity and the lexis-syntax interface
Wolfram BUBLITZ: ‘Sailing the islands or watching from te dock’: the treachererous simplicity of a metaphor: How we handle ‘new (electronic) hypertext’ versus ‘old (printed) text’
Ronald CARTER: and Svenja ADOLPHS: Linking the verbal and visual: new directions for corpus linguistics
Henry G. WIDDOWSON: The novel features of text. Corpus analysis and stylistics
Guy COOK: Hocus pocus or God’s truth: The dual indentity of Michael Stubbs