2nd Edition

Discourse Analysis Beyond the Speech Event

By Stanton Wortham, Angela Reyes Copyright 2021
    250 Pages 53 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    250 Pages 53 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    In its first edition, winner of the 2016 Edward Sapir Book Prize from the Society for Linguistic Anthropology of the American Anthropological Association

    Discourse Analysis Beyond the Speech Event introduces a new approach to discourse analysis. In this innovative work, Wortham and Reyes argue that discourse analysts should look beyond fixed speech events and consider the development of discourses over time. Drawing on theories and methods from linguistic anthropology and related fields, this book is the first to present a systematic methodological approach to conducting discourse analysis of linked events, allowing researchers to understand not only individual events but also the patterns that emerge across them.

    This new edition:

    • Draws on theories and methods from linguistic anthropology and related fields;
    • Presents the first systematic methodological approach to doing discourse analysis of linked events;
    • Provides easy-to-use tools and techniques for analyzing discourse both within and across events;
    • Offers transparent procedures and clear illustrations to show how the approach can be applied to analyze three types of data: ethnographic, archival, and new media;
    • Includes a new chapter focusing on the discourse analysis of contemporary nationalist new media data.

    Updated and revised for the second edition, this book is essential reading for advanced students and researchers working in the area of discourse analysis.

    Table of contents

    List of illustrations

    Acknowledgments

    1 Discourse analysis across events

    2 Central tools and techniques

    3 Discourse analysis of ethnographic data

    4 Discourse analysis of archival data

    5 Discourse analysis of new media data

    6 Discourse analysis of contemporary nationalist new media

    7 Conclusions

    Transcription conventions

    Abbreviations of names

    References

    Index

    Biography

    Stanton Wortham is Charles F. Donovan, S.J., Dean of the Boston College Lynch School of Education and Human Development. He has written on classroom discourse and the linguistic anthropology of education, interactional positioning in media discourse and autobiographical narrative, and Mexican immigrant communities in the U.S.

    Angela Reyes is Professor of English at Hunter College and Doctoral Faculty in Anthropology at the Graduate Center, City University of New York. She has written on language and racialization, Asian American youth, and ideologies of mixed race and mixed language in the Philippines.