All aspects of illness and healthcare are mediated by language:
experiences of illness, death and healthcare provision are talked and
written about (face-to-face or online), while medical consultations,
research interviews, public health communications and even some
diagnostic instruments are all inherently linguistic in nature. How we
talk to, about and for each other in such a sensitive context has
consequences for our relationships, our sense of self, how we
understand and reason about our health, as well as for the quality
care we receive. Yet, linguistic analysis has been conspicuously
absent from the mainstream of medical education, health communication
training and even the medical or health humanities. The chapters in
this volume bring together applied linguistic work using discourse
analysis, corpus methods, conversation analysis, metaphor analysis,
cognitive linguistics, multiculturalism research, interactional
sociolinguistics, narrative analysis, and (im)politeness to make sense
of a variety of international healthcare contexts and situations.
These include: -clinician-patient interactions -receptionist-patient
interactions -online support forums -online counselling -public health
communication -media representations -medical accounts -diagnostic
tools and definitions -research interviews with doctors and patients
The volume demonstrates how linguistic analysis can not only improve
understandings of the lived-experience of different illnesses, but
also has implications for communications training, disease prevention,
treatment and self-management, the effectiveness of public health
messaging, access to appropriate care, professional mobility and
professional terminology, among others.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781350057678
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter