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Theorizing language
Talbot J. Taylor

Issue #0

Theorizing language

analysis, normativity, rhetoric, history

Pergamon (1997)
9780080425771
271 pages | English
Dewey 401
LC Classification P106 .T344 1997
LC Control No. 97035646

Subject

  • Language And Languages - Philosophy

Plot

Although what language users in different cultures say about their own language has long been recognized as of potential interest, its theoretical importance to the study of language has typically been thought to be no more than peripheral. "Theorizing Language" is the first book to place the reflexive character of language at the very centre both of its empirical study and of its theoretical explanation. Language can only be explained as a cultural product of the reflexive application of its own creative powers to construct, regulate, and give conceptual form to objects of understanding. Language is itself, first and foremost, an object of cultural understanding. Theoretical analyses of language which have neglected its reflexive character, or simply taken its effects for granted, merely impose their own artificial structures on their analytical object. The first part of this book discusses the consequences of neglecting this reflexive character for the technical concepts and methods which are used in analysing different types of communicational phenomena. In the second part, normativity - a crucial aspect of language's reflexive nature - is examined. The book's third and final part focuses on particular issues in the history of linguistic thought which bear witness to the rhetoric of language theorizing as a reflexive form of inquiry.

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Added Date Aug 26, 2016 18:28:48
Modified Date Aug 26, 2016 18:28:48