Samuel Gyasi Obeng 
Language In African Social Interaction [PDF ebook] 
Indirectness In Akan Communication

Support
Cover of Samuel Gyasi Obeng: Language In African Social Interaction (PDF)

In African societies, much as plain or direct language is cherished and highly appreciated because of the pragmatic clarity it offers, implicitness, indirectness, vagueness, prolixity, ambiguity and even avoidance are even more cherished and preferred especially when the subject matter of what is being communicated is difficult or face-threatening. Verbal indirection, the communicational strategy in which interactants abstain from directness in order to avoid crises or in order to communicate "difficulty, " and thus make their utterances consistent with face and politeness, is pervasive in African (Akan) social interaction. The groundbreaking book explores various linguistic and discursive devices speakers employ when engaged in indirectness. Among the linguistic and discursive strategies discussed are the use of: pronoun mismatching, nouns (especially proverbial names and other names with indirect meanings), evasions, hedges and various forms of pre sequences (which help to eliminate perceived obstacles to making such speech acts as announcements, requests, or invitations), acknowledgement of imposition, proverbs, metaphors, innuendoes, euphemisms, circumlocution, riddles, tales, hyperbolas, and communication through intermediaries or proxies.

€50.39
payment methods
Buy this ebook and get 1 more FREE!
Format PDF ● Pages 191 ● ISBN 9781633210998 ● Editor Samuel Gyasi Obeng ● Publisher Nova Science Publishers ● Published 2014 ● Downloadable 3 times ● Currency EUR ● ID 7224541 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
Requires a DRM capable ebook reader

More ebooks from the same author(s) / Editor

159,508 Ebooks in this category