Izvestiya of Saratov University.

Philology. Journalism

ISSN 1817-7115 (Print)
ISSN 2541-898X (Online)


Full text PDF(Ru):
(downloads: 0)
Language: 
Russian
Heading: 
Article type: 
Article

THEORETICAL ISSUES OF STUDYING COMPLEX VOICE EVENTS ON THE TEXT MATERIAL: Cognitive Aspect

Autors: 
Dubrovskia Olga N., Saratov State University
Abstract: 

Complex speech events are a special form of communicative interaction, have a complex structure and are fixed in the language in the form of names. Interpretation of texts of memoirs and stories about life, as well as media texts about events, should take into account the cognitive aspects of the presentation of the event in the text - the features of the reference and text events, as well as the existence of a prototypical event. Analysis of complex speech events on the material of memorial texts allows us to determine the socio-cultural factors that form this or that event concept.

Key words: 
Reference: 
1. Dubrovskaya ON On the interpretation of the concepts "event" and "speech event" in linguistics // Vestnik Astrakhan. tech. University. 2005. № 5 (28). September October. P.129-137.
2. Arutyunova N.D. Types of language values. Evaluation, event, fact. M., 1988
3. Shabes V.Ya. The ratio of cognitive and communicative components in speech activity. Event and text: Abstract. ... Dr. Philol. sciences. L., 1990.
4. Samoylenko N.A. Semantics of events and ways to express it: Author's abstract. dis. ... cand. philol. sciences. Alma-Ata, 1991
5. Iriskhanova, O.K. Semantics of event nouns in language and speech: Author's abstract. dis. ... cand. philol. sciences. M., 1997.
6. Goldin V.E. Names of speech events, acts and genres of Russian speech // Genres of speech. Saratov, 1997. P.23-34.
7. Dubrovskaya ON National-cultural specificity of the system of names of complex speech events in English and Russian languages ​​// Romano-Germanic Philology. Saratov, 2003. Issue 3
8. Bennett J. Events and Their Names. Oxford, 1988.
9. Hymes D. Sociolinguistics and the Ethnography of Speaking // Social Anthropology and Language. 1971. P.47-93