Textlinguistic Discourse Analysis

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47 within the last ten to twenty years.59 Textlinguistics concerns dynamic language use in a text under a certain context and how and why meaning is created and conveyed through linguistic form (text). Accordingly, textlinguistics provides vantage points from which we may read a text. The aim of textingusitics is to explain: (1) what makes a text a coherent whole rather than a collection of constituent parts (words or sentences) and various discrete units?60 (2) what the communicative function and framework of a text is where the author and reader interact under a certain principle.61 Even though there are varieties of approaches to
59For brief histories, see M. Stubbs, Discourse Analysis: The Sociolinguistic Analysis of Natural Language (Language in Society 4; Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1983), 1-12; Robert de Beaugrande, “Text Linguistics through the Years,” Text 10 (1990): 9-17; R. de Beaugrande and W. Dressler, Introduction to Text Linguistics (London: Longman, 1981), 14-30; Peter J. MacDonald, “Discourse Analysis and Biblical Interpretation,” in Linguistics and Biblical Hebrew (ed. Walter R. Bodine, Winona: Eisenbrauns, 1992), 153-75. Among the basic volumes in textlinguistics worth considering are: W. Dressler, ed., Current Trends in Textlinguistics (Berlin: Walter de …show more content…

In addition, the author attempts to achieve his/her communicative intention by producing the text. The audience is the receiver of the text. In the act of text reception, the author’s communicative intention embodied in the text is accomplished. Thus, as Jeanrond maintains, “Text production and reception are both guided by communicative intention.”65 The text also refers to the external universe, including components such as objects, persons, spatio-temporal situations, and beliefs (the content of communication). The text demonstrates how the author understands the

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