Being and Knowledge: On Some Liabilities of Reed`s Interpretivism*
... terpretation of Saussurean presuppositions, which force him to treat ‘evidential signs’ as mere linguistic signifiers in the text of the human scientist [2011: 20], and the implications of what even theorists like Judith Butler [1993] acknowledge as irrefutable facts of life. Reed himself admits in p ...
... terpretation of Saussurean presuppositions, which force him to treat ‘evidential signs’ as mere linguistic signifiers in the text of the human scientist [2011: 20], and the implications of what even theorists like Judith Butler [1993] acknowledge as irrefutable facts of life. Reed himself admits in p ...
Social Symbolism
... summarized briefly the most important questions raised in studies of symbolization. One could refer to more contemporary authors, like Clifford Geertz or Mary Douglas, than those quoted by Schutz, but his accurate formulation of the pervading confusion over four fundamental questions is still valid. ...
... summarized briefly the most important questions raised in studies of symbolization. One could refer to more contemporary authors, like Clifford Geertz or Mary Douglas, than those quoted by Schutz, but his accurate formulation of the pervading confusion over four fundamental questions is still valid. ...
Lecture Note 3: Historical-Hermeneutic Studies
... The process of intentionality has been differentiated by Husserl into two components, namely noema and noesis. The concept of noema (intentional-object) indicates the objects being intended to, conscious of and grasped, i.e. the ...
... The process of intentionality has been differentiated by Husserl into two components, namely noema and noesis. The concept of noema (intentional-object) indicates the objects being intended to, conscious of and grasped, i.e. the ...
Towards a New Approach in Social Simulations
... legacy and widely used his phenomenology for criticizing the traditional AI approaches, e.g. [7] and [16]. According to Merleau-Ponty the phenomenal is not an object out there but is constructed through our bodily and sensory functions. In other words, intentional objects of thought (noumenal) canno ...
... legacy and widely used his phenomenology for criticizing the traditional AI approaches, e.g. [7] and [16]. According to Merleau-Ponty the phenomenal is not an object out there but is constructed through our bodily and sensory functions. In other words, intentional objects of thought (noumenal) canno ...
223 I. Identity and Representation Peirre Bourdieu
... (emblems, flags, badges, etc.) or acts, self-interested strategies of symbolic manipulation which aim at determining the (mental) representation that other people may form of these properties and their bearers. In other words, the characteristics and criteria noted by objectivist sociologists and an ...
... (emblems, flags, badges, etc.) or acts, self-interested strategies of symbolic manipulation which aim at determining the (mental) representation that other people may form of these properties and their bearers. In other words, the characteristics and criteria noted by objectivist sociologists and an ...
WHAT IS MEANT BY DISCOURSE ANALYSIS?
... Discourse analysis does not presuppose a bias towards the study of either spoken or written language. In fact, the monolithic character of the categories of speech and writing is increasingly being challenged, especially as the gaze of analysts turns to multi-media texts and practices on the Interne ...
... Discourse analysis does not presuppose a bias towards the study of either spoken or written language. In fact, the monolithic character of the categories of speech and writing is increasingly being challenged, especially as the gaze of analysts turns to multi-media texts and practices on the Interne ...
Language-Independent Socio-Emotional Role
... sume a personal perspective; Supporter - a speaker that shows a cooperative attitude demonstrating attention and acceptance providing technical and relational support; Neutral - a speaker that passively accepts others ideas; Gatekeeper - a speaker that acts like group moderator, mediates and encoura ...
... sume a personal perspective; Supporter - a speaker that shows a cooperative attitude demonstrating attention and acceptance providing technical and relational support; Neutral - a speaker that passively accepts others ideas; Gatekeeper - a speaker that acts like group moderator, mediates and encoura ...
Experiments in Context and Contexting
... only attends to the contexts actors themselves explicitly mobilise, versus an approach that insists upon being sensitive to that which is externalized, marginalized, and suppressed. It also raises the question of the task of scholars in social science and humanities traditions: is the challenge to t ...
... only attends to the contexts actors themselves explicitly mobilise, versus an approach that insists upon being sensitive to that which is externalized, marginalized, and suppressed. It also raises the question of the task of scholars in social science and humanities traditions: is the challenge to t ...
Semiotic Anthropology
... less contextual, more conventional kinds of meaning (the symbolic or semantic level, focused more on language content than form). (See Morris 1971 on the semantic/pragmatic distinction.) A further complication is introduced by the need to incorporate analysis of meanings that derive from language-in ...
... less contextual, more conventional kinds of meaning (the symbolic or semantic level, focused more on language content than form). (See Morris 1971 on the semantic/pragmatic distinction.) A further complication is introduced by the need to incorporate analysis of meanings that derive from language-in ...
Introduction: The role of discourse analysis in society. 1983.
... in the account of language and language use are reached, who cares about the possible usefulness of our insights? Possible applications, for example, for practical purposes in several social domains, are seen as by-products of linguistic inquiry, and applied research does not seem to have the same s ...
... in the account of language and language use are reached, who cares about the possible usefulness of our insights? Possible applications, for example, for practical purposes in several social domains, are seen as by-products of linguistic inquiry, and applied research does not seem to have the same s ...
"Ideology" in: The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social and
... political movements. The most basic and commonly held view of ideology is that it is a system of multiple beliefs, ideas, values, principles, ethic, morals, goals, and so on, that overlap, shape, and reinforce one another. In Swidler’s (1986: 279) influential terms, ideology is “a highly articulated ...
... political movements. The most basic and commonly held view of ideology is that it is a system of multiple beliefs, ideas, values, principles, ethic, morals, goals, and so on, that overlap, shape, and reinforce one another. In Swidler’s (1986: 279) influential terms, ideology is “a highly articulated ...
Stories and Social Networks Warren Sack
... provide technologies akin to co-citation analysis, but have their own particular strengths and weaknesses. These sorts of sociological “story understanding” technologies are very different from the story understanding technologies of an older, symbolic AI, but they have some affinities with techniqu ...
... provide technologies akin to co-citation analysis, but have their own particular strengths and weaknesses. These sorts of sociological “story understanding” technologies are very different from the story understanding technologies of an older, symbolic AI, but they have some affinities with techniqu ...
Exploring reality through new lenses
... related to the expansion and change of both objects of research and the disciplinary portfolio in higher education. During the last decade a number of professional studies have been gradually more “academized”: the nursing profession, the social work profession and journalism, just to mention a few. ...
... related to the expansion and change of both objects of research and the disciplinary portfolio in higher education. During the last decade a number of professional studies have been gradually more “academized”: the nursing profession, the social work profession and journalism, just to mention a few. ...
Norms and Sociolinguistic Description1
... social status, one of the many possible evaluative dimensions. Apart from recent years the other evaluative dimensions have received limited amount of attention. Although the word prestige is tightly connected to social status, in the literature it is often used as a term that refers to any kind of ...
... social status, one of the many possible evaluative dimensions. Apart from recent years the other evaluative dimensions have received limited amount of attention. Although the word prestige is tightly connected to social status, in the literature it is often used as a term that refers to any kind of ...
Society for Ethnomusicology
... To explain means to account for observable phenomena in terms of their underlyingregularities,or principles(Hempel 1966). We might first note that one never explains something by previously assumingit. The difference between explaining and assuminglies in evidence. Explanations require empirical sup ...
... To explain means to account for observable phenomena in terms of their underlyingregularities,or principles(Hempel 1966). We might first note that one never explains something by previously assumingit. The difference between explaining and assuminglies in evidence. Explanations require empirical sup ...
A polylogue? Where and how to move with and in
... intra-psychological domain (Hermans, 2001a). The idea is that the self comprises a multiplicity of relatively autonomous I-positions, each with a distinctive voice. The dialogical self is the totality of these I-positions and the dynamic movement, or stream of thought, shifting between these I-posit ...
... intra-psychological domain (Hermans, 2001a). The idea is that the self comprises a multiplicity of relatively autonomous I-positions, each with a distinctive voice. The dialogical self is the totality of these I-positions and the dynamic movement, or stream of thought, shifting between these I-posit ...
Social Digital Discourse: New Challenges for Corpus
... sub-disciplines, in particular corpus- and sociolinguistics. It shows that social digital discourses can enrich the discussion of linguistic concepts as they pose new challenges for linguistic researchers – but they also offer new opportunities. It focuses on Wikipedia, Facebook and Twitter to show ...
... sub-disciplines, in particular corpus- and sociolinguistics. It shows that social digital discourses can enrich the discussion of linguistic concepts as they pose new challenges for linguistic researchers – but they also offer new opportunities. It focuses on Wikipedia, Facebook and Twitter to show ...
emergence of linguistic features: independent
... be unknown in a BSS task. The goal in ICA is to learn the decomposition in an unsupervised manner, which means that we only observe the mixed signals and have no information about the mixing coefficients or the contents of the original signals. For the cocktail party problem, this would mean that IC ...
... be unknown in a BSS task. The goal in ICA is to learn the decomposition in an unsupervised manner, which means that we only observe the mixed signals and have no information about the mixing coefficients or the contents of the original signals. For the cocktail party problem, this would mean that IC ...
Linguistic Anthropology in 2013: Super-New-Big AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST Angela Reyes Linguistic Anthropology
... more complex forms of communication (Arnaut et al. 2012; Blommaert et al. 2012). In this sense, its fundamental premise claims that superdiversity is “there,” happening, and ready to be described by “us,” the researcher. Thus, superdiversity is a theory built on what is understood as an empirical ch ...
... more complex forms of communication (Arnaut et al. 2012; Blommaert et al. 2012). In this sense, its fundamental premise claims that superdiversity is “there,” happening, and ready to be described by “us,” the researcher. Thus, superdiversity is a theory built on what is understood as an empirical ch ...
Linguistic anthropology: Language as a non
... experiences encourages speakers to categorize those referents as the same or as experientially related to one another. As suggested by Lucy (1992a, 1996), a superficial reading of Whorf’s writings could easily lead to questionable generalizations based on flawed logic or defective methods. Some of t ...
... experiences encourages speakers to categorize those referents as the same or as experientially related to one another. As suggested by Lucy (1992a, 1996), a superficial reading of Whorf’s writings could easily lead to questionable generalizations based on flawed logic or defective methods. Some of t ...
Children`s games as local semiotic play: An ethnographic account.
... Masibulele was in the 'strong group' in her streamed classroom and was often sent to assist children in the two 'weak groups': they contained around half the children; those who were just not 'getting it' when it came to the ‘basics’ of reading and who exasperated their teacher. Masibulele played d ...
... Masibulele was in the 'strong group' in her streamed classroom and was often sent to assist children in the two 'weak groups': they contained around half the children; those who were just not 'getting it' when it came to the ‘basics’ of reading and who exasperated their teacher. Masibulele played d ...
In this paper show how social media content can
... performance in terms of recall and precision compared to Neural Network and Bayesian method. It from this only discuss about the twitter social network. [2] In this paper show how social media content can be used to measure the online reputation of a company. Presents an open platform that uses a se ...
... performance in terms of recall and precision compared to Neural Network and Bayesian method. It from this only discuss about the twitter social network. [2] In this paper show how social media content can be used to measure the online reputation of a company. Presents an open platform that uses a se ...
How language changed the genes: toward an explicit account of the
... (1999), have tried to demonstrate that Generative Grammar does make evolutionary sense, but we believe that Chomsky is right: from the evolutionary perspective, his innateness claim cannot be reconciled with his specific characterisation of language as a non-functional cognitive apparatus. The oppos ...
... (1999), have tried to demonstrate that Generative Grammar does make evolutionary sense, but we believe that Chomsky is right: from the evolutionary perspective, his innateness claim cannot be reconciled with his specific characterisation of language as a non-functional cognitive apparatus. The oppos ...
Paper Complexity, mobility, migration
... should know. We focus on what the authorities have made available to us: the letter that Bashir received reporting the result of his application as well as the reasoning employed by the authorities for dismissing his asylum request. The text in question is a re-entextualization of the contents of th ...
... should know. We focus on what the authorities have made available to us: the letter that Bashir received reporting the result of his application as well as the reasoning employed by the authorities for dismissing his asylum request. The text in question is a re-entextualization of the contents of th ...
All of the Above: New Coalitions in Sociocultural Linguistics
... related fields focuses on the U.S. context, with which we are most familiar, it is important to note that in many ways the field we describe has counterparts in other regions of the world. Sociocultural research on language has long been international in scope, extending to Africa, Asia and the Paci ...
... related fields focuses on the U.S. context, with which we are most familiar, it is important to note that in many ways the field we describe has counterparts in other regions of the world. Sociocultural research on language has long been international in scope, extending to Africa, Asia and the Paci ...