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11 - Methodological Take-2B: Describing Ritual Contexts

from Part III - Methodological Issues

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2024

Dániel Z. Kádár
Affiliation:
Dalian University of Foreign Languages, China and Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics
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Summary

Chapters 10 and 11 provide a solution for the study of interactionally complex ritual phenomena, by systematically breaking them down into replicable pragmatic units of analysis. The complexity of a ritual phenomenon can either mean that a phenomenon is too broad to be discussed as a single ritual, i.e., it represents a form of ritual behaviour which spans across many different ritual contexts, or it represents a particular context and related ritual frame which triggers ritual behaviour but cannot be subsumed under a single ritual heading from the pragmatician’s point of view. Chapter 11 focuses on the second type of difficulty: it proposes a discourse-analytic approach through which seemingly ad hoc and erratic interactional ritual behaviour in a single complex ritual frame can be studied in a replicable way. As a case study, the chapter will examine ritual bargaining in Chinese markets. While bargaining is a ritual in the popular sense of the word, it is problematic from the pragmatician’s point of view to refer to bargaining as a ritual, without considering whether and how it manifests itself in recurrent patterns of ritual language use.

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Ritual and Language , pp. 192 - 214
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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References

Edmondson, W., House, J., Kádár, D. (2023) Expressions, Speech Acts and Discourse: A Pedagogic Interactional Grammar of English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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