TY - JOUR
T1 - Spoken and written narration in Hebrew
T2 - A case study
AU - Ravid, Dorit
AU - Chen-Djemal, Yehudit
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© John Benjamins Publishing Company.
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - The study is premised on speech and writing relying on differently coordinated temporal frames of communication, aiming to pinpoint the conceptual and linguistic differences between spoken and written Hebrew narration. This is a case study presenting in-depth psycholinguistic analyses of the oral and written versions of a personal-experience story produced by the same adult narrator in Hebrew, taking into account discursive functions, discourse stance, linguistic expression, and information flow, processing, and cohesion. Findings of parallel spoken and written content units presenting the same narrative information point to the interface of the narrative genre with the spoken and written modalities, together with the mature cognitive, linguistic, and social skills and experience of adulthood. Both spoken and written personal-experience adult narrative versions have a non-personal, non-specific, detached stance, though the written units are more abstract and syntactically complex. Adult narrating skill encompasses both modalities, recruiting different devices for the expression of cohesion.
AB - The study is premised on speech and writing relying on differently coordinated temporal frames of communication, aiming to pinpoint the conceptual and linguistic differences between spoken and written Hebrew narration. This is a case study presenting in-depth psycholinguistic analyses of the oral and written versions of a personal-experience story produced by the same adult narrator in Hebrew, taking into account discursive functions, discourse stance, linguistic expression, and information flow, processing, and cohesion. Findings of parallel spoken and written content units presenting the same narrative information point to the interface of the narrative genre with the spoken and written modalities, together with the mature cognitive, linguistic, and social skills and experience of adulthood. Both spoken and written personal-experience adult narrative versions have a non-personal, non-specific, detached stance, though the written units are more abstract and syntactically complex. Adult narrating skill encompasses both modalities, recruiting different devices for the expression of cohesion.
KW - Cohesion
KW - Discourse syntax
KW - Hebrew
KW - Narratives
KW - Speech and writing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84923360450&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1075/wll.18.1.03rav
DO - 10.1075/wll.18.1.03rav
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AN - SCOPUS:84923360450
SN - 1387-6732
VL - 18
SP - 56
EP - 81
JO - Written Language and Literacy
JF - Written Language and Literacy
IS - 1
ER -