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Bibliografická citace

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0 (hodnocen0 x )
(7) Půjčeno:7x 
BK
1st pub.
London : Routledge, 2001
xvii, 203 s. : il. ; 24 cm

objednat
ISBN 0-415-23169-8 (brož.)
Bibliografie na s. [189]-199, rejstřík
000134232
Contents // Figures xi // Tables XV // Acknowledgem en ts XV і // What to expect and what not to expect 1 // Bibliographical end-notes 7 // Text as a site for interaction 11 // Introduction 11 // Text as a site of interaction amongst author, writer, audience // and reader 13 // Purposes of the interactions amongst author, writer, // audience and reader 15 // The writer’s desire to meet the audience’s needs 18 // Signals from writer to reader: moment-by-moment guidance 27 // Clause relations as a reflection of a text’s interactivity 30 // Implications for the language learner 31 // Bibliographical end-notes 32 // Interaction in text - the larger perspective 35 // Introduction 35 // Questions that receive a deferred answer 35 // Signals as messages from writer to reader: previews and // intertextuality 43 // Implications for the language learner 49 // Bibliographical end-notes 50 // The hierarchical organisation of texts 52 // An apology and an introduction 52 // A reader’s larger questions 52 // Texts with a simple hierarchical organisation 53 // The hierarchical organisation of a joke 57 // Setting 58 // A more complicated example: a first visit to Goldilocks and the Three Bears 62 // A return to Death and the Compass 66 // Bibliographical end-notes 70 // 5 The organisation of some ‘Cinderella’ texts 72 // Introduction 72 // The criminal statute 73 // The text as ‘colony’ 74 // The definition of a colony 75 // The properties of a colony 77 // Texts classified according to the properties of a colony 87 // The way colonies are read 89 // Implications for the language learner 90 // A footnote 91 // Bibliographical end-notes 92 // 6 A matrix perspective on text 93 // The structure of a happening and its possible tellings 93 // The matrix as a kind of telling 98 // The variable precision of matrices // The matrix analysis of a newspaper story 102 // A matrix perspective on Death and the Compass 105 //
An extension of the notion of the matrix 109 // Some implications for language learning 117 // Bibliographical end-notes 118 // 7 Culturally popular patterns of text organisation 119 // Introduction 119 // Schemata and scripts 119 // Culturally popular patterns of organisation 121 // The Problem-Solution pattern 123 // The signals of a Problem-Solution pattern 125 // An intermediate stage between Problem and Response 127 // Two advertisements displaying Problem-Solution patterning 128 // Recycling in Problem-Solution patterns 130 // Participant-linking in Problem-Solution patterns 133 // Interlocking patterns in narrative 138 // Summary of the characteristics of Problem-Solution patterns 140 // Bibliographical end-notes 141 // 8 Other culturally popular patterns 142 // Introduction 142 // The limitations of Problem-Solution patterning 142 // The Goal-Achievement pattern 145 // The Opportunity-Taking pattern 150 // The Desire Arousal-Fulfilment pattern 155 // The Gap in Knowledge-Filling pattern 161 // A final return to Death and the Compass 164 // One pattern or many? 166 // Some implications for language learning 167 // Bibliographical end-notes 169 // 9 When the pattern turns into a dialogue 170 // Introduction 170 // Question-Answer patterns 170 // Why Question-Answer is different 176 // The relationship of Question-Answer patterns to Claim-Response patterns 178 // A cline of patterns 183 // Where patterning and interaction meet 184 // A short conclusion 187 // Bibliographical end-notes 188 // Bibliography 189 // Index 200

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