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  • © 2008

Communicating with One Another

Toward a Psychology of Spontaneous Spoken Discourse

  • Challenges the mainstream trend in psycholinguistics to focus primarily on the language system itself, on the syntax and well-formedness
  • Disputes the idea that spontaneous spoken discourse is flawed, inefficient, and chaotic
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

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Softcover Book USD 109.99
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Hardcover Book USD 109.99
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Table of contents (24 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages 1-18
  2. A Critique of Mainstream Psycholinguistics

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 1-1
    2. The Problematic

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-10
    3. Empirical Methods

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-14
    4. Fluency and Hesitation

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-7
    5. The Written

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-9
  3. Foundations for Research on Spontaneous Spoken Discourse

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 1-1
    2. Rhetoric

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-10
    3. Intentionality

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-5
    4. From Monologism to Dialogicality

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-6
    5. Listening

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-7
  4. Empirical Research on Spontaneous Spoken Discourse

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 1-1
    2. Punctuation

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-9
    3. Transcription

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-9
    4. Pauses

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-13
    5. Prosody

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-8
    6. Fillers

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-12
    7. Interjections

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-9
    8. Referring

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-6
    9. Turn-taking

      • Daniel C. O’Connell, Sabine Kowal
      Pages 1-13

About this book

In contrast to traditional approaches of mainstream psycholinguists, the authors of Communicating with One Another approach spontaneous spoken discourse as a dynamic process, rich with structures, patterns, and rules other than conventional grammar and syntax. Daniel C. O’Connell and Sabine Kowal thoroughly critique mainstream psycholinguistics, proposing instead a shift in theoretical focus from experimentation to field observation, from monologue to dialogue, and from the written to the spoken. They invoke four theoretical principles: intersubjectivity, perspectivity, open-endedness, and verbal integrity. Their analyses of historical and original research raise significant questions about the relationship between spoken and written discourse, particularly with regard to transcription and punctuation. With emphasis on political discourse, media interviews, and dramatic performance, the authors review both familiar and unexplored characteristics of spontaneous spoken communication, including: (1) The speaker’s use of prosody. (2) The functions of interjections. (3) What fillers do for a living. (4) Turn-taking: Smooth and otherwise. (5) Laughter, applause, and booing: from individual listener to collective audience. (6) Pauses, silence, and the art of listening.

The paradigm shift proposed in Communicating with One Another will interest and provoke readers concerned about communicative language use – including psycholinguists, sociolinguists, and anthropological linguists.

Authors and Affiliations

  • St. Louis, U.S.A.

    Daniel C. O'Connell

  • Technische Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany

    Sabine Kowal

About the authors

The authors are experimental psychologists who have been engaged in research together for 40 years now. Dan O’Connell studied at St. Louis University and did doctoral work at the University of Illinois (Champaign/Urbana), Sabine Kowal studied at the Free University of Berlin and did doctoral work at St. Louis University. O’Connell’s career was at St. Louis, Loyola of Chicago, and Georgetown Universities, while Kowal’s was at both the Technical University of Berlin and the Anna Freud Oberschule in Berlin. For many years, the team was oriented toward mainstream psycholinguistics and experimental research on speech production. Throughout the last decades of the 20th century, their interest shifted to spontaneous spoken discourse under field observational conditions. This shift had as its origin their observation that professional speakers known for their eloquence in public dialogue violate both ideal delivery and syntactic well-formedness – concepts established in mainstream psycholinguistics as norms for effective communication. O’Connell and Kowal have ascribed the use of these norms to a written language bias and have accordingly turned their attention – both empirically and theoretically -- to the use of genuine spoken discourse. Radio and TV political interviews have provided much of the empirical data base for their recent research, and their emphasis on spontaneous spoken discourse has led to the investigation of neglected speech phenomena such as fillers, pauses, interjections, and laughter in both English- and German-language corpora.

Bibliographic Information

Buy it now

Buying options

eBook USD 84.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as EPUB and PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
Softcover Book USD 109.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info
Hardcover Book USD 109.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Durable hardcover edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access