Comparing Empirical Methodologies in Pragmatics: A Meta-Analysis of Research on Directive Speech Acts
Publikation: Beiträge in Sammelwerken › Kapitel › begutachtet
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Analyzing Pragmatic Variation in English: New Developments in Contrastive, Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Pragmatics. LINCOM Europa, 2024. S. 47-87.
Publikation: Beiträge in Sammelwerken › Kapitel › begutachtet
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Comparing Empirical Methodologies in Pragmatics
T2 - A Meta-Analysis of Research on Directive Speech Acts
AU - Flöck, Ilka
AU - Geluykens, Ronald
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - In this chapter, we set out to illustrate the theoretical and methodological distinctions used in Geluykens (this volume) by applying them to one particular type of speech acts, viz. directives. In directive speech acts, the speaker linguistically indexes their desire for an addressee to carry out a future action that the addressee would not have carried out without direction (cf. e.g. Searle, 1969, 1976). In our review, we include studies that have empirically investigated any directive speech act in spoken language. We provide an overview of the research on directives, categorize this research database as to whether they have focused on production or perception, which part of the directive sequence was investigated, which data type was employed (elicited vs. non-elicited vs. mixed), and which particular (pragmatic) subdiscipline or framework was applied. We furthermore provide a meta-analysis of directives research and outline the correlational patterns found between methodological choices and frameworks applied. Our meta-analysis shows that there is no clear preference for a specific data type overall; the data type correlates with the specific framework applied. While contrastive research designs make the use of elicited data more likely, there are still a number of studies which achieve variable control while using non-elicited data.
AB - In this chapter, we set out to illustrate the theoretical and methodological distinctions used in Geluykens (this volume) by applying them to one particular type of speech acts, viz. directives. In directive speech acts, the speaker linguistically indexes their desire for an addressee to carry out a future action that the addressee would not have carried out without direction (cf. e.g. Searle, 1969, 1976). In our review, we include studies that have empirically investigated any directive speech act in spoken language. We provide an overview of the research on directives, categorize this research database as to whether they have focused on production or perception, which part of the directive sequence was investigated, which data type was employed (elicited vs. non-elicited vs. mixed), and which particular (pragmatic) subdiscipline or framework was applied. We furthermore provide a meta-analysis of directives research and outline the correlational patterns found between methodological choices and frameworks applied. Our meta-analysis shows that there is no clear preference for a specific data type overall; the data type correlates with the specific framework applied. While contrastive research designs make the use of elicited data more likely, there are still a number of studies which achieve variable control while using non-elicited data.
M3 - Chapter
SP - 47
EP - 87
BT - Analyzing Pragmatic Variation in English
PB - LINCOM Europa
ER -