Difference between revisions of "Dissociative attitude"
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Volker gast (talk | contribs) (Created page with 'The expression of a '''dissociative attitude''' has been claimed to be a key ingredient of ironical use of language (see e.g. Wilson 2006): :"The main point in typical cases of ...') |
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− | Wilson, | + | Wilson, Deirdre. 2006. The pragmatics of verbal irony. ''Lingua'' 116: 1722-1743. |
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[[Category:Pragmatics]] | [[Category:Pragmatics]] |
Revision as of 11:53, 24 May 2009
The expression of a dissociative attitude has been claimed to be a key ingredient of ironical use of language (see e.g. Wilson 2006):
- "The main point in typical cases of verbal irony ... is to express the speaker's dissociative attitude to a tacitly attributed utterance or thought ..., based on some perceived discrepancy between the way it represents the world and and the way things actually are ..." (Wilson 2006: 1724)
The term 'dissociative attitude' applies to attitudes such as scepticism, mockery and rejection, i.e. attitudes in which speakers distance themselves from the committment to the truth or appropriateness of a proposition or utterance.
References
Wilson, Deirdre. 2006. The pragmatics of verbal irony. Lingua 116: 1722-1743.