Naming or Shaming? Presentations of the Self in Specialised Weblog Discourse
During examination of data from a small, specialised corpus, unexpected elements were identified inviting further analysis. Characteristic instances of naming behaviour were observed, prompting deeper investigation into this aspect of web discourse. A corpus of around 100,000 tokens was assembled o...
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Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of Verona
2017-12-01
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doaj-c48a2689f61240e6a3e249a24a4b726d2021-03-03T10:23:49ZengDepartment of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of VeronaIperstoria2281-45822017-12-0101010.13136/2281-4582/2017.i10.482393Naming or Shaming? Presentations of the Self in Specialised Weblog DiscourseRichard ChapmanDuring examination of data from a small, specialised corpus, unexpected elements were identified inviting further analysis. Characteristic instances of naming behaviour were observed, prompting deeper investigation into this aspect of web discourse. A corpus of around 100,000 tokens was assembled over a single day in 2014 by collecting contributions to a weblog discussion of the Israel-Palestine conflict. Research aims were to observe linguistic behaviour over a limited timescale and involving a specific, highly controversial topic. Examination of methodological issues concerned with small corpora and how they should be interrogated was a secondary aim. Data were analysed quantitatively and qualitatively, with a stated intention from the outset to employ a hands-on approach as much as possible. Various problems emerged, the most suggestive being employment of names and highly pragmatic discourse features in curious ways. A rereading of data concentrating on names, other forms of self-presentation, and attempts to impose identities on others, suggested a need for discourse-level analysis of linguistic behaviour in weblogs, since naming devices often appear as phrases rather than individual words (although they present as a single token with no spaces) and presuppose a textual environment, pragmatic interpretation and a form of dialogue.https://iperstoria.it/article/view/482 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Richard Chapman |
spellingShingle |
Richard Chapman Naming or Shaming? Presentations of the Self in Specialised Weblog Discourse Iperstoria |
author_facet |
Richard Chapman |
author_sort |
Richard Chapman |
title |
Naming or Shaming? Presentations of the Self in Specialised Weblog Discourse |
title_short |
Naming or Shaming? Presentations of the Self in Specialised Weblog Discourse |
title_full |
Naming or Shaming? Presentations of the Self in Specialised Weblog Discourse |
title_fullStr |
Naming or Shaming? Presentations of the Self in Specialised Weblog Discourse |
title_full_unstemmed |
Naming or Shaming? Presentations of the Self in Specialised Weblog Discourse |
title_sort |
naming or shaming? presentations of the self in specialised weblog discourse |
publisher |
Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of Verona |
series |
Iperstoria |
issn |
2281-4582 |
publishDate |
2017-12-01 |
description |
During examination of data from a small, specialised corpus, unexpected elements were identified inviting further analysis. Characteristic instances of naming behaviour were observed, prompting deeper investigation into this aspect of web discourse.
A corpus of around 100,000 tokens was assembled over a single day in 2014 by collecting contributions to a weblog discussion of the Israel-Palestine conflict. Research aims were to observe linguistic behaviour over a limited timescale and involving a specific, highly controversial topic. Examination of methodological issues concerned with small corpora and how they should be interrogated was a secondary aim. Data were analysed quantitatively and qualitatively, with a stated intention from the outset to employ a hands-on approach as much as possible.
Various problems emerged, the most suggestive being employment of names and highly pragmatic discourse features in curious ways. A rereading of data concentrating on names, other forms of self-presentation, and attempts to impose identities on others, suggested a need for discourse-level analysis of linguistic behaviour in weblogs, since naming devices often appear as phrases rather than individual words (although they present as a single token with no spaces) and presuppose a textual environment, pragmatic interpretation and a form of dialogue. |
url |
https://iperstoria.it/article/view/482 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT richardchapman namingorshamingpresentationsoftheselfinspecialisedweblogdiscourse |
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