Diskurse, Texte, Traditionen
Modelle und Fachkulturen in der Diskussion
Martin Becker, Katrin Berty, Micaela Carrera de la Red, Désirée Cremer, Elmar Eggert, Ludwig Fesenmeier, Anke Grutschus, Frank J. Harslem, Sandra Issel-Dombert, Johannes Kabatek, Rose Keßler, Franz Lebsanft, Óscar Loureda Lamas, Andreas Musolff, David Nelting, Daniela Pietrini, Raúl Sánchez Prieto, Angela Schrott, Raymund Wilhelm, Miriam Wittum, Johanna Wolf, Francisco José Zamora Salamanca
What do opening dialogues, sonnets and the interaction style of the most diverse cultural and social groups share in common? The connecting element is the traditionality of speech – all speakers follow cultural patterns to convey their communicative intentions appropriately and successfully. In the same way as a sonnet or a novel is shaped by literary traditions of textual form, opening dialogues or speech styles that people cultivate in different contexts and communicative situations follow cultural traditions and habits. The starting point of this volume is the function of discursive traditions – a subject of intensive debate in recent years – that are a form of cultural knowledge and guide the textual form and thus constitute the essence of a culturally oriented linguistics. Research on the (romanistic) discursive tradition looks into the cultural techniques of speech in different linguistic and cultural areas and their relevance for shaping societal and cultural groups. On the basis of theory formation in Romanistic studies this volume presents and discusses models and methods developed in different areas of study that explain how traditions influence our speech and our writing. It opens up perspectives for an interdisciplinary philological and cultural analysis of texts and discourse.