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Self-Praise Across Cultures and Contexts
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Self-Praise Across Cultures and Contexts/ edited by Chaoqun Xie, Ying Tong.
other author:
Xie, Chaoqun.
Description:
X, 384 p. 167 illus., 97 illus. in color.online resource. :
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Pragmatics. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-99217-0
ISBN:
9783030992170
Self-Praise Across Cultures and Contexts
Self-Praise Across Cultures and Contexts
[electronic resource] /edited by Chaoqun Xie, Ying Tong. - 1st ed. 2022. - X, 384 p. 167 illus., 97 illus. in color.online resource. - Advances in (Im)politeness Studies,2524-4019. - Advances in (Im)politeness Studies,.
Chapter 1.Introduction: Self-Praise across Cultures and Contexts -- Part 1: Self-Praise in Digital Discourse -- Chapter 2. “I’m Your Guy”: Self-Promoting Behaviour in a Translators’ Forum -- Chapter 3. Self-Promoting: A Double-Edged Sword -- Chapter 4. “I am Bloody Amazing and so are You!”: The (Im)politeness of Self-Praise in the Instagram Posts of Fashion and Lifestyle Bloggers -- Chapter 5. Self-Praise in and through Selfies: A Multimodal Perspective -- Chapter 6. Other-Produced Self-Praise: A Mitigation Strategy -- Chapter 7. An Empirical Study of Chinese Microbloggers’ Explicit Self-Praises -- Part 2: Self-Praise in Face-to-Face Discourse -- Chapter 8. Self-praise in Peninsular Spanish Face-to-Face Interaction -- Chapter 9. Self-Praise in BELF Meetings -- Chapter 10. The Self, the Other, the Tribe, and the Divine: Self-Praise Discourse in Jordanian Arabic -- Chapter 11. Self-Praise in the Mexican Context: A Sociocultural Approach -- Part 3: Self-Praise in Public Discourse -- Chapter 12. The Double-Edged Practice of Self-Praise and Self-Denigration in Korean Public Discourse -- Chapter 13. Self-Praise in Czech Television Talk Shows -- Chapter 14. Self-Praise in Russian: A Wild Goose Chase -- Chapter 15. “I am Well-Loved by the Voters.”: Self-Praise in Thai Political Discourse and Two Emic Concepts of Thai (im)politeness.
This book explores the extent to which self-praise is acceptable in both offline and online contexts, across different genres, platforms, and cultural backgrounds. The data analyzed encompass both naturally occurring (daily conversation as well as institutional talk) and elicited (experiments and interviews) types, and are explored at both quantitative and qualitative levels to offer a relatively systematic and comprehensive inquiry into self-praise as social (inter)action. Contributors to this book not only draw on traditional politeness theories but are also informed by social psychology, interactional sociolinguistics, CMC, and (multimodal) discourse analysis. They are inspired by pragmatics but also go beyond to ground their studies within locally situated cultural contexts, most of which are under-presented in the current academic world. Their efforts substantiate the fact that self-praise is most worthy of intensive analytic attention. This book appeals to students and researchers in the field and contributes to the way communication is facilitated through different ways of deploying linguistic and interactional resources.
ISBN: 9783030992170
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-030-99217-0doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
556167
Pragmatics.
LC Class. No.: P99.4.P72
Dewey Class. No.: 401.45
Self-Praise Across Cultures and Contexts
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Chapter 1.Introduction: Self-Praise across Cultures and Contexts -- Part 1: Self-Praise in Digital Discourse -- Chapter 2. “I’m Your Guy”: Self-Promoting Behaviour in a Translators’ Forum -- Chapter 3. Self-Promoting: A Double-Edged Sword -- Chapter 4. “I am Bloody Amazing and so are You!”: The (Im)politeness of Self-Praise in the Instagram Posts of Fashion and Lifestyle Bloggers -- Chapter 5. Self-Praise in and through Selfies: A Multimodal Perspective -- Chapter 6. Other-Produced Self-Praise: A Mitigation Strategy -- Chapter 7. An Empirical Study of Chinese Microbloggers’ Explicit Self-Praises -- Part 2: Self-Praise in Face-to-Face Discourse -- Chapter 8. Self-praise in Peninsular Spanish Face-to-Face Interaction -- Chapter 9. Self-Praise in BELF Meetings -- Chapter 10. The Self, the Other, the Tribe, and the Divine: Self-Praise Discourse in Jordanian Arabic -- Chapter 11. Self-Praise in the Mexican Context: A Sociocultural Approach -- Part 3: Self-Praise in Public Discourse -- Chapter 12. The Double-Edged Practice of Self-Praise and Self-Denigration in Korean Public Discourse -- Chapter 13. Self-Praise in Czech Television Talk Shows -- Chapter 14. Self-Praise in Russian: A Wild Goose Chase -- Chapter 15. “I am Well-Loved by the Voters.”: Self-Praise in Thai Political Discourse and Two Emic Concepts of Thai (im)politeness.
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This book explores the extent to which self-praise is acceptable in both offline and online contexts, across different genres, platforms, and cultural backgrounds. The data analyzed encompass both naturally occurring (daily conversation as well as institutional talk) and elicited (experiments and interviews) types, and are explored at both quantitative and qualitative levels to offer a relatively systematic and comprehensive inquiry into self-praise as social (inter)action. Contributors to this book not only draw on traditional politeness theories but are also informed by social psychology, interactional sociolinguistics, CMC, and (multimodal) discourse analysis. They are inspired by pragmatics but also go beyond to ground their studies within locally situated cultural contexts, most of which are under-presented in the current academic world. Their efforts substantiate the fact that self-praise is most worthy of intensive analytic attention. This book appeals to students and researchers in the field and contributes to the way communication is facilitated through different ways of deploying linguistic and interactional resources.
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