Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Review Article: Boundaries in Discourse Analysis.
View graph of relations

Review Article: Boundaries in Discourse Analysis.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Review Article: Boundaries in Discourse Analysis. / Wodak, Ruth.
In: Language in Society, Vol. 35, No. 4, 10.2006, p. 595-611.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Wodak R. Review Article: Boundaries in Discourse Analysis. Language in Society. 2006 Oct;35(4):595-611. doi: 10.1017/S004740450606026X

Author

Wodak, Ruth. / Review Article: Boundaries in Discourse Analysis. In: Language in Society. 2006 ; Vol. 35, No. 4. pp. 595-611.

Bibtex

@article{7490b8f6c1ff472ea7ff668ebee67864,
title = "Review Article: Boundaries in Discourse Analysis.",
abstract = "Discourse analysts come from a variety of intellectual traditions (systemic-functional linguistics, American descriptive linguistics, ethnomethodology, and critical theory among them) and work in a variety of ways. As a result, there is recurring discussion among practitioners about the boundaries that constitute discourse analysis as a field/theory/method in relation to other fields/theories/methods. The following reviews all take up this discussion in treatments of discourse analysis in recent textbooks and other programmatic work. Readers should note that this collection is the result of happy editorial coincidence – Ruth Wodak proposed a review article that came to press about the same time as other book reviews fitting this theme arrived at LiS. It is not the result of a systematic attempt to cover the field, which would require the kind of intellectual boundary-work these reviews report on and represent.",
author = "Ruth Wodak",
year = "2006",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1017/S004740450606026X",
language = "English",
volume = "35",
pages = "595--611",
journal = "Language in Society",
issn = "1469-8013",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Review Article: Boundaries in Discourse Analysis.

AU - Wodak, Ruth

PY - 2006/10

Y1 - 2006/10

N2 - Discourse analysts come from a variety of intellectual traditions (systemic-functional linguistics, American descriptive linguistics, ethnomethodology, and critical theory among them) and work in a variety of ways. As a result, there is recurring discussion among practitioners about the boundaries that constitute discourse analysis as a field/theory/method in relation to other fields/theories/methods. The following reviews all take up this discussion in treatments of discourse analysis in recent textbooks and other programmatic work. Readers should note that this collection is the result of happy editorial coincidence – Ruth Wodak proposed a review article that came to press about the same time as other book reviews fitting this theme arrived at LiS. It is not the result of a systematic attempt to cover the field, which would require the kind of intellectual boundary-work these reviews report on and represent.

AB - Discourse analysts come from a variety of intellectual traditions (systemic-functional linguistics, American descriptive linguistics, ethnomethodology, and critical theory among them) and work in a variety of ways. As a result, there is recurring discussion among practitioners about the boundaries that constitute discourse analysis as a field/theory/method in relation to other fields/theories/methods. The following reviews all take up this discussion in treatments of discourse analysis in recent textbooks and other programmatic work. Readers should note that this collection is the result of happy editorial coincidence – Ruth Wodak proposed a review article that came to press about the same time as other book reviews fitting this theme arrived at LiS. It is not the result of a systematic attempt to cover the field, which would require the kind of intellectual boundary-work these reviews report on and represent.

U2 - 10.1017/S004740450606026X

DO - 10.1017/S004740450606026X

M3 - Journal article

VL - 35

SP - 595

EP - 611

JO - Language in Society

JF - Language in Society

SN - 1469-8013

IS - 4

ER -