Disorderly Discourse: Narrative, Conflict, And Inequality Paperback
Recommend
Sort by
Rating
Date
Specifications
Author 1
Charles L. Briggs
Book Description
Conflict plays a crucial role in social interactions, and representations of conflict are an important aspect of language. Stories and narratives involving everything from war to playground disputes generate, sustain, mediate, and represent conflict at all levels of social organization. Still, despite the vast amount of research on conflict and narrative in a number of disciplines, no one has yet examined how these play off of each other; in fact, most studies treat narrative merely as a source of information about conflict rather then as a part of conflict's process. The contributors to this collection argue that language consists of socially and politically situated practices that are differentially distributed on the basis of gender, class, race, ethnicity, and other categories. Each of them, writing from the perspective of their own disciplines, challenges previous assumptions about narrative and social conflict as they interpret a range of disputes that emerge in a variety of settings. Taken in total, these essays substantially further our theoretical and methodological understanding of narrative and conflict and how they intersect.
ISBN-13
9780195087772
Language
English
Publisher
Oxford University Press, USA
Publication Date
01-06-1997
Number of Pages
256
Editor 1
Charles L. Briggs
Editorial Review
This collection constitutes a significant contribution to anthropological linguistics, the ethnography of communication, ethnolinguistics, and sociolinguistics. It will interest students of conflict/conflict talk in several fields. * Allen Grimshaw, Indiana University *