Pragmatique cognitive, argumentation et perlocution
This paper discusses the links between pragmatics (defined as the study of meaning in context) and the study of argumentation in order to ground a pragmatic approach to perlocution. Traditionally devoted to the study of illocutionary meaning, in the vein of speech act theory, pragmatics has tended t...
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University of Tel-Aviv
2020-10-01
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Online Access: | http://journals.openedition.org/aad/4793 |
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doaj-6e1cb9ef2e0b4467972751eed6b38ff02020-11-25T04:04:08ZfraUniversity of Tel-AvivArgumentation et Analyse du Discours1565-89612020-10-012510.4000/aad.4793Pragmatique cognitive, argumentation et perlocutionSteve OswaldThis paper discusses the links between pragmatics (defined as the study of meaning in context) and the study of argumentation in order to ground a pragmatic approach to perlocution. Traditionally devoted to the study of illocutionary meaning, in the vein of speech act theory, pragmatics has tended to exclude the perlocutionary act from the set of phenomena it set out to account for. Here I try to show how different pragmatic approaches over time have kept some space to account for the latter and resort to cognitive pragmatics to defend the claim that this particular vein of pragmatic research provides tools for a pragmatic account of persuasion/conviction, which is, by essence, a perlocutionary act. The methodological advantages of this proposal, which will be of interest to rhetoricians, are also discussed.http://journals.openedition.org/aad/4793interpretative constraintsperlocutionary actpragmaticsrhetoric |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
fra |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Steve Oswald |
spellingShingle |
Steve Oswald Pragmatique cognitive, argumentation et perlocution Argumentation et Analyse du Discours interpretative constraints perlocutionary act pragmatics rhetoric |
author_facet |
Steve Oswald |
author_sort |
Steve Oswald |
title |
Pragmatique cognitive, argumentation et perlocution |
title_short |
Pragmatique cognitive, argumentation et perlocution |
title_full |
Pragmatique cognitive, argumentation et perlocution |
title_fullStr |
Pragmatique cognitive, argumentation et perlocution |
title_full_unstemmed |
Pragmatique cognitive, argumentation et perlocution |
title_sort |
pragmatique cognitive, argumentation et perlocution |
publisher |
University of Tel-Aviv |
series |
Argumentation et Analyse du Discours |
issn |
1565-8961 |
publishDate |
2020-10-01 |
description |
This paper discusses the links between pragmatics (defined as the study of meaning in context) and the study of argumentation in order to ground a pragmatic approach to perlocution. Traditionally devoted to the study of illocutionary meaning, in the vein of speech act theory, pragmatics has tended to exclude the perlocutionary act from the set of phenomena it set out to account for. Here I try to show how different pragmatic approaches over time have kept some space to account for the latter and resort to cognitive pragmatics to defend the claim that this particular vein of pragmatic research provides tools for a pragmatic account of persuasion/conviction, which is, by essence, a perlocutionary act. The methodological advantages of this proposal, which will be of interest to rhetoricians, are also discussed. |
topic |
interpretative constraints perlocutionary act pragmatics rhetoric |
url |
http://journals.openedition.org/aad/4793 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT steveoswald pragmatiquecognitiveargumentationetperlocution |
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1724437641641852928 |