Publication: Lists as alternative discourse structures to narratives in preschool children's conversations
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
N/A
Advisor
Publication Date
2004
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
This study examines a corpus of conversations of Turkish preschool-age children with adults, with the goal of analyzing 2 types of extended discourse structures (i.e., lists and narratives). Lists and narratives are compared with respect to (a) their internal structures, and (b) their social functions in the participants' daily interactions. The analyses suggest that although lists and narratives differ on structural grounds, they overlap in the functions they serve for the tellers. Lists constitute more of a descriptive structure, although temporality is foregrounded in narratives. Yet, both genres are used to express strips of past experience, and are employed by the same child in similar contexts, framed by similar metadiscourse comments, often blending into another. These findings suggest that, although lists and narratives are revealed as 2 clearly differentiable genres on formal analyses, lists carry some features of narrativity in children's conversational interactions.
Description
Source:
Discourse Processes
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
Keywords:
Subject
Psychology, Educational Psychology, Experimental psychology