Bibliographic Information

Multilingual communication

edited by Juliane House, Jochen Rehbein

(Hamburg studies on multilingualism, v. 3)

J. Benjamins, c2004

  • : Eur
  • : U.S. : hb

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In a world of increasing migration and technological progress, multilingual communication has become the rule rather than the exception. This book reflects the growing interest in understanding communication between members of different linguistic groups and contains a collection of original papers by members of the German Science Foundation's research center on multilingualism at Hamburg University and by international experts, offering an overview of the most important research fields in multilingual communication. The book is divided into four sections dealing with interpreting and translation, code-switching in various institutional contexts, two important strands of multilingual communication: rapport and politeness, and contrastive studies of Japanese and German grammar and discourse. The editors' preface presents the relevant theoretical and methodological background to the issues discussed in this book and points to useful directions for future research.

Table of Contents

  • 1. What is multilingual communication? (by House, Juliane)
  • 2. Toward an agenda for developing multilingual communication with a community base (by Clyne, Michael)
  • 3. Part I: Mediated Multilingual Communication
  • 4. Ad-hoc-interpreting and the achievement of communicative purposes in doctor-patient-communication (by Buhrig, Kristin)
  • 5. The interaction of spokenness and writtenness in audience design (by Baumgarten, Nicole)
  • 6. Connectivity in translation: Transitions from orality to literacy (by Buhrig, Kristin)
  • 7. Genre-mixing in business communication (by Bottger, Claudia)
  • 8. Part II: Code-Switching
  • 9. Strategic code-switching in New Zealand workplaces: Scaffolding, solidarity and identity construction (by Holmes, Janet)
  • 10. Code-switching and world-switching in foreign language classroom discourse (by Edmondson, Willis J.)
  • 11. The neurobiology of code-switching: Inter-sentential code-switching in an fMRI-study (by Franceschini, Rita)
  • 12. Part III: Rapport and Politeness
  • 13. Rapport management problems in Chinese-British business interactions: A case study (by Spencer-Oatey, Helen)
  • 14. Introductions: Being polite in multilingual settings (by Fienemann, Jutta)
  • 15. Part IV: Grammar and Discourse in a Contrastive Perspective
  • 16. Modal expressions in Japanese and German planning discourse (by Kameyama, Shinichi)
  • 17. A comparative analysis of Japanese and German complement constructions with matrix verbs of thinking and believing: "to omou" and "ich glaub(e)" (by Hohenstein, Christiane)
  • 18. Author Index
  • 19. Subject Index

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Details

  • NCID
    BA73866666
  • ISBN
    • 9027219230
    • 1588115895
  • LCCN
    2004059580
  • Country Code
    ne
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Amsterdam
  • Pages/Volumes
    viii, 358 p.
  • Size
    23 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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