Linell offers a clear and comprehensive account of the differences between monologism and dialogism as competing epistemologies in the language sciences. [...] I can think of no other monograph length text which does this.”<br />“Linell has played an important role in developing the theoretical framework for studying discourse and communication, and in arguing for the significance of discourse studies for traditional areas in linguistics and pragmatics.
- Paul Drew, University of York,
This book is well-timed and ambitious. [It] draws on a range of traditions in discourse study, making it both more rewarding and more challenging to read. On the whole, Linell is to be commended for developing a dialogical theory of discourse while remaining firmly grounded in the study of authentic spoken interaction.
- Maurice Neville, Australian National University in LANGUAGE, Volume 77:3 (2001),
People’s communicative projects, and the structures and functions of talk-in-interaction, are analyzed from the most local sequences to the comprehensive communicative activity types and genres. A second aim of the book is to explore the possibilities and limitations of dialogism as a general epistemology for cognition and communication. On this point, it portrays the dialogical approach as a major alternative to the mainstream theories of cognition as individually-based information processing, communication as information transfer, and language as a code. Stressing aspects of interaction, joint construction and cultural embeddedness, and drawing upon extensive theoretical and empirical research carried out in different traditions, this book aims at an integrating synthesis. It is largely interdisciplinary in nature, and has been written in such a way that it can be used at advanced undergraduate courses in linguistics, sociopragmatics of language, communication studies, sociology, social psychology and cognitive science.
About the author: Per Linell holds a Ph.D. in linguistics and has been professor within the interdisciplinary graduate program of Communication Studies at the University of Linköping, Sweden, since 1981. He has published widely in the fields of discourse studies and social pragmatics of language.