| Janet Staiger - 1992 - 296 sivua
...utterances to very specific moments. The linguistic significance of a given utterance [for a listener] is understood against the background of language,...of contradictory opinions, points of view and value judgments—that is, precisely that background that, as we see, complicates the path of any word toward... | |
| Patrick J. M. Costello, Sally Mitchell - 1995 - 244 sivua
...a dialogic view of language (as it does the personal identity project). Bakhtin (1981: 281) writes: actual meaning is understood against the background...of contradictory opinions, points of view and value judgements - that is precisely that background that, as we see, complicates the path of any word towards... | |
| Janina Falkowska - 1996 - 212 sivua
...dialogized and pulsating with rich, contradictory lives. Bakhtin postulates in The Dialogic Imagination, "The linguistic significance of a given utterance...language, while its actual meaning is understood against other concrete utterances on the same theme, a background made up of contradictory opinions, points... | |
| Sue Vice - 1997 - 254 sivua
...different sense of inevitability (Norman will have her wrath wreaked upon him). As Bakhtin puts it, ‘The linguistic significance of a given utterance is understood [...] against the background of other concrete utterances on the same theme, a background made up of contradictory opinions, points... | |
| Liisa North, Alan Burtham Simmons - 1999 - 362 sivua
...victim status. In each case, the women's discourse was produced "in a dialogue" that gains meaning "understood against the background of other concrete...contradictory opinions, points of view and value judgments" (Bakhtin 1981, 279, 281). The dialogue in this case included, but was not exclusive to, the conversation... | |
| Lucy Burke, Tony Crowley, Alan Girvin - 2000 - 532 sivua
...that is, it is an understanding of an utterance's neutral sign ification and not its actual meaning. The linguistic significance of a given utterance is...contradictory opinions, points of view and value judgments — that is, precisely that background that, as we see, complicates the path of any word toward its... | |
| Jeffrey S. Miller - 2000 - 276 sivua
...Bakhtin. Although language may help determine the meaning of a given "utterance," Bakhtin suggests, the actual meaning is "understood against the background...contradictory opinions, points of view, and value judgments—that is, precisely that background that, as we see, complicates the path of any word toward... | |
| Jeffrey S. Miller - 2000 - 282 sivua
...Although language may help determine the meaning of a given “utterance,” Bakhtin suggests, the actual meaning is “understood against the background...contradictory opinions, points of view, and value judgments—that is, precisely that background that, as we see, cornplicates the path of any word toward... | |
| Brenton Doecke, David Homer, Helen Nixon - 2003 - 372 sivua
...these four students spoke and wrote their way into English teaching. Their conversations took place 'against the background of other concrete utterances...of contradictory opinions, points of view and value judgements' that 'complicates the path of any word towards its object' (Bakhtin 1981: 281). What they... | |
| Thomas Mical - 2005 - 380 sivua
...atmosphere of the word, the atmosphere that surrounds the object, makes the facets of the image sparkle... The linguistic significance of a given utterance is...contradictory opinions, points of view and value judgments - that is, precisely that background that, as we see, complicates the path of any word toward its object.... | |
| |