A multimodal approach to reformulation: contrastive study of French and French Belgian Sign Language through the productions of speakers, signers and interpreters

Reformulation is remarkably frequent in discourse and has been the subject of much work in spoken languages, both on written and oral data. Because of its metalinguistic nature, combined with its general aim of clarifying an expression, the act of reformulation offers a window to the way speakers process and adjust their expression in discourse. However, to date, the study of reformulation has hardly taken into account the now increasingly recognized multimodal and semiotically composite nature of language. This study aims to revisit the notion of reformulation from a multimodal perspective by... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Meurant, Laurence
Sinte, Aurélie
Gabarró López, Sílvia
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Verlag/Hrsg.: John Benjamins Publishing
Schlagwörter: Reformulation / Multimodality / Signed language / Spoken language / Interpreters / Reformulation markers / French/French Belgian Sign Language (LSFB)
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26919591
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://hdl.handle.net/10230/54952

Reformulation is remarkably frequent in discourse and has been the subject of much work in spoken languages, both on written and oral data. Because of its metalinguistic nature, combined with its general aim of clarifying an expression, the act of reformulation offers a window to the way speakers process and adjust their expression in discourse. However, to date, the study of reformulation has hardly taken into account the now increasingly recognized multimodal and semiotically composite nature of language. This study aims to revisit the notion of reformulation from a multimodal perspective by comparing the use and semiotic composition of reformulations in the discourse of speakers and signers, as well as in the productions of interpreters. In doing so, we lay the foundations for a comparative study of discourse in signed and spoken language that accounts for the multimodality and semiotic complexity of language practices in different human ecologies.