Spelling suggestions: "subject:"discourse."" "subject:"ciscourse.""
61 |
The time course of discourse priming in the interpretation of conceptual combinationsSappington, Randy Earl 30 October 2006 (has links)
People often create novel lexical expressions to efficiently communicate their
thoughts to others. Noun-noun phrases, also known as conceptual
combinations, serve as an example of these novel expressions. Most of the
research on conceptual combination has focused on structural features of the
phrases. However, other research has demonstrated that discourse context can
also influence how these phrases are interpreted. Across two experiments, we
demonstrate that discourse context has a greater influence on how people
interpret these combinations than does a structural level manipulation. We also
examine the strength of this contextually based-effect over a series of time
delays. The findings from this study indicate that, while structural features of a
given conceptual combination influence how that combination is interpreted, the
discourse surrounding the novel combination plays a more influential role in the
resulting interpretation. The influence of context is more pronounced than has
been suggested in much of the research on conceptual combination.
|
62 |
Implication of the cultural influence on development discourse manifested in the interaction of Cambodian and "Western" discourse on development issuesImam, Zeba 30 October 2006 (has links)
Cambodia has a strong presence of international donor agencies and expatriate
development practitioners. The role of international donors in making government
increasingly gender responsive is believed to be immense. This thesis contends that most
expatriate and Cambodian development practitioners have different perceptions on the
issue due to cultural influences. Due to these differences sometimes there emerge
incongruence in the approach (that is often determined by international players) and the
beliefs of most national practitioners who are responsible to implement these
approaches. The problem of domestic violence is used as a case in point to demonstrate
this incongruence.
The thesis argues that the differences in views do not get discussed and thereafter
resolved because the communication processes being followed are not open and
dialogical in nature. It suggests that there are two primary reasons that come in the way
of dialogic communication. One is related to the hierarchically different positions that
expatriates and Cambodian practitioners occupy in the context of development work. The other is related to the difference in the perceptions of the practitioners depending on
their degree of connectedness with the cultural setting.
The thesis concludes that there is a need for introspection by the development
practitioners for the reasons that may lie within them and their organizations for this
communication gap. This is essential for initiating communication processes that are
open so that the development practitioners may begin to arrive at common understanding
as well as trusting relationships. The study is conducted following the tenets of the
âÂÂnaturalistic inquiryâ as proposed by Lincoln and Guba (1985).
|
63 |
Experiencing emotional labor: an analysis of the discursive construction of emotional laborHaman, Mary Kathryn 25 April 2007 (has links)
This study analyzes how employees at a university recreation center discursively
construct their experiences of emotional labor, how they conceptualize such behavior in
terms of displaying unfelt emotions and faking in good and bad faith, and what these
discursive constructions reveal about their perceptions of authenticity. The findings
demonstrate that workers construct emotional labor as a natural ability and as performing
a role. People who construct emotional labor as a natural ability depict themselves as the
controller of their workplace emotion. They display unfelt emotions in good faith when
they do so to uphold anotherâÂÂs face, and they believe that they possess a true self.
Employees who construct emotional labor as performing a role view their supervisors as
controller of their workplace emotion. They fake emotions in good faith when doing so
uphold their own face, and they fake in bad faith when it upholds the face of a co-worker
who they feel needs to be disciplined. These people do not possess a sense of authentic
self. They view themselves as multi-faceted and they say that they use social
comparison to determine how to behave in particular situations. These findings reveal
previously unexplored complexities in scholarsâ conceptions of emotional labor and
authenticity.
|
64 |
Abstracting and extracting causal coherence and the development of the life story /Grysman, Azriel, January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Rutgers University, 2009. / "Graduate Program in Psychology." Includes bibliographical references (p. 24-28).
|
65 |
Die Discourse der Mahlern, Zürich, 1721-23, und Der Mahler der Sitten, Zürich, 1746, aprachlich verglichen oin Beitrag zur Geachichte der nhd. schriftspracho in der Schweiz.Hildebrand, Sune Hildebrand, January 1909 (has links)
Inaug.--Diss.--Uppsala. / Der Mahler der Sitten is a new ed. of Discourse der Mahlern. "Literaturverzeichnis": p. [v]-vi.
|
66 |
"A city not forsaken" the structure and speakers of Isaiah 60-62 /Luther, Brian P. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Th. M.)--Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, 2003. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 131-135).
|
67 |
The problematic application of economic discourse to the creation and transfer of informationJohnson, Christopher Garland 15 August 2012 (has links)
In Citizen's United v. FEC (2010) and Sorrell v. IMS Health, Inc. (2011), the Supreme Court of the United States passed down a pair of opinions which clearly show the weaknesses of economic discourse as applied to the creation and transfer of information, itself defined as speech the court's opinion in Bartnicki v. Vopper (2001). Foucoult described economic discourse in his Archaeology of Knowledge (1972) as being particularly exclusive, both in terms of other discourse as well as to the potential participants in the discourse. This paper argues for the need to incorporate alternate modes of discourse that would provide a more complete understanding of the practical, social, ethical and legal parameters surrounding information's creation and transfer. / text
|
68 |
The discourse dynamics of metaphor in the business decision making of a web development companyVan de Ven, Maarten Jeroen. January 2011 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Linguistics / Master / Master of Philosophy
|
69 |
A methodological approach towards the analysis and creation of Improvisational Theatre.Willemse, Liezl. January 2014 (has links)
M. Tech. Drama / The focus of this research is in the area of Improvisational Theatre and Discourse Analysis. The purpose of this study is to use the selected tools from Improvisational theory and Discourse Analysis (with specific reference to the sub-category known as 'Conversational Analysis') as a way to assess the effectiveness of improvisation in theory, but then, by extension, to explore ways in which these very tools might be used to enhance theatrical improvisation.
|
70 |
An analysis of communication among members of four teams monitoring anenquiry serviceWong, Lai-chun, 黃麗珍 January 1989 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Language Studies / Master / Master of Arts
|
Page generated in 0.036 seconds