TY - BOOK
T1 - Positive social acts
T2 - a metapragmatic exploration of the brighter and darker sides of sociability
AU - Danziger, Roni
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - "Sociability is friendly behavior that is performed by a variety of positive social acts that are aimed to establish, promote, or restore relationships. However, attempts to achieve these interactional goals can fail or backfire; moreover, interactants may abuse these strategies. A pragmatic focus on positive social acts illuminates the ways they succeed in promoting sociability and why they sometimes fail to enhance social relations. This Element analyzes positive social actions receiving positive and negative metapragmatic labels, such as firgun and flattery, in the Hebrew-speaking community in Israel. Adopting a metapragmatic methodology enables a differentiation between positive communication and its evaluation as (in)appropriate in context. The Conclusion discusses the fuzzy line between acceptable and unacceptable positive behavior and the benefits and perils of deploying positive social acts in interaction. It also suggests a conceptualization of the darker and brighter sides of sociability as intrinsically connected, rather than polar ends"--
AB - "Sociability is friendly behavior that is performed by a variety of positive social acts that are aimed to establish, promote, or restore relationships. However, attempts to achieve these interactional goals can fail or backfire; moreover, interactants may abuse these strategies. A pragmatic focus on positive social acts illuminates the ways they succeed in promoting sociability and why they sometimes fail to enhance social relations. This Element analyzes positive social actions receiving positive and negative metapragmatic labels, such as firgun and flattery, in the Hebrew-speaking community in Israel. Adopting a metapragmatic methodology enables a differentiation between positive communication and its evaluation as (in)appropriate in context. The Conclusion discusses the fuzzy line between acceptable and unacceptable positive behavior and the benefits and perils of deploying positive social acts in interaction. It also suggests a conceptualization of the darker and brighter sides of sociability as intrinsically connected, rather than polar ends"--
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009184410
DO - https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009184410
M3 - كتاب
SN - 1009184415
SN - 1009184423
SN - 1009195948
SN - 1009195956
SN - 9781009184427
T3 - Cambridge elements. Elements in pragmatics
BT - Positive social acts
PB - Cambridge University Press
CY - Cambridge; New York, NY
ER -