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80006374 03 01 01 JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code CELCR 3 Eb 15 9789027297785 06 10.1075/celcr.3 13 2001056472 DG 002 02 01 CELCR 02 1566-7774 Converging Evidence in Language and Communication Research 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Thematics</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Interdisciplinary Studies</Subtitle> 01 celcr.3 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/celcr.3 1 B01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 2 B01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 01 eng 458 x 448 LAN009000 v.2006 CF 2 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.DISC Discourse studies 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PRAG Pragmatics 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PSYLIN Psycholinguistics 05 06 01 Themes play a central role in our everyday communication: we have to know what a text is about in order to understand it. Intended meaning cannot be understood without some knowledge of the underlying theme. This book helps to define the concept of &#8216;themes&#8217; in texts and how they are structured in language use.<br />Much of the literature on Thematics is scattered over different disciplines (literature, psychology, linguistics, cognitive science), which this detailed collection pulls together in one coherent overview. The result is a new landmark for the study and understanding of themes in their everyday manifestation. 05 "Thematics: Interdisciplinary Studies", edited by Max Louwerse and Willie van Peer, is obviously an essential book for academics from various disciplines concerned by thematics. The book is well balanced between theoretical and practical aspects. It also demonstrates clearly the importance of an interdisciplinary point of view to the study and analysis of thematics. Furthermore, it presents a good overview of the 'classical' perspective to the problem of thematics. It allows the reader to understand the importance and the complexity of the subject. Researchers concerned by the computational approach to thematic analysis will find in the section "Computational Approaches" very interesting methods of analysis endorsed by relevant experiments. Dominic Forest, in Linguist List Vol. 14-2171 04 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/celcr.3.png 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027238887.jpg 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027238887.tif 06 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/celcr.3.hb.png 07 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/celcr.3.png 25 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/celcr.3.hb.png 27 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/celcr.3.hb.png 10 01 JB code celcr.3.01pre ix 1 Miscellaneous 1 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Preface</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.02lou 1 13 13 Miscellaneous 2 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Introduction</TitleText> 1 A01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 2 A01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 10 01 JB code celcr.3.03par 15 18 4 Section header 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Part I. Structure and processing</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.04sec Section header 4 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 1. Theoretical approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.05gra 19 34 16 Chapter 5 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">1. Psychological and computational research on theme comprehension</TitleText> 1 A01 Arthur C. Graesser Graesser, Arthur C. Arthur C. Graesser University of Memphis 2 A01 Victoria J. Pomeroy Pomeroy, Victoria J. Victoria J. Pomeroy University of Memphis 3 A01 Scotty D. Craig Craig, Scotty D. Scotty D. Craig University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.06zwa 35 53 19 Chapter 6 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">2. Situation models and themes</TitleText> 1 A01 Rolf A. Zwaan Zwaan, Rolf A. Rolf A. Zwaan Florida State University 2 A01 Gabriel A. Radvansky Radvansky, Gabriel A. Gabriel A. Radvansky University of Notre Dame 3 A01 Shannon Whitten Whitten, Shannon Shannon Whitten University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.07oos 55 76 22 Chapter 7 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">3. Conditions of updating during reading</TitleText> 1 A01 Herre van Oostendorp Oostendorp, Herre van Herre van Oostendorp Utrecht University 2 A01 José Otero Otero, José José Otero Universidad de Alcalá 3 A01 Juan Miguel Campanario Campanario, Juan Miguel Juan Miguel Campanario Universidad de Alcalá 10 01 JB code celcr.3.08sec Section header 8 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 2. Experimental and corpus linguistic approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.09she 77 90 14 Chapter 9 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">4. Evaluation devices as a coordinating mechanism for story points</TitleText> 1 A01 Yeshayahu Shen Shen, Yeshayahu Yeshayahu Shen Tel Aviv University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.10emm 91 117 27 Chapter 10 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">5. Responding to style</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Cohesion, foregrounding and thematic interpretation</Subtitle> 1 A01 Catherine Emmott Emmott, Catherine Catherine Emmott University of Glasgow 10 01 JB code celcr.3.11ger 119 136 18 Chapter 11 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">6. The definite article <i>the</i> as a cue to map thematic information</TitleText> 1 A01 Morton Ann Gernsbacher Gernsbacher, Morton Ann Morton Ann Gernsbacher University of Wisconsin-Madison 2 A01 Rachel Robertson Robertson, Rachel Rachel Robertson University of Wisconsin-Madison 10 01 JB code celcr.3.12kim 137 156 20 Chapter 12 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">7. Thematic management in Korean</TitleText> 1 A01 Myung-Hee Kim Kim, Myung-Hee Myung-Hee Kim Hanyang University, Korea 10 01 JB code celcr.3.13sec Section header 13 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 3. Computational approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.14kin 157 170 14 Chapter 14 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">8. On the notions of theme and topic in psychological process models of text comprehension</TitleText> 1 A01 Walter Kintsch Kintsch, Walter Walter Kintsch University of Colorado 10 01 JB code celcr.3.15le 171 187 17 Chapter 15 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">9. Themes and hierarchical structure of written texts</TitleText> 1 A01 Élisabeth Le Le, Élisabeth Élisabeth Le University of Alberta 10 01 JB code celcr.3.16lou 189 212 24 Chapter 16 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">10. Computational retrieval of themes</TitleText> 1 A01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.17par 213 216 4 Section header 17 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Part II. Contents and contexts</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.18sec Section header 18 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 1. Theoretical approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.19sol 217 235 19 Chapter 19 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">11. Thematics today</TitleText> 1 A01 Werner Sollors Sollors, Werner Werner Sollors Harvard University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.20pet 237 252 16 Chapter 20 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">12. Seven trends in recent thematics and a case study</TitleText> 1 A01 Bo Pettersson Pettersson, Bo Bo Pettersson University of Helsinki 10 01 JB code celcr.3.21pee 253 263 11 Chapter 21 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">13. Where do literary themes come from?</TitleText> 1 A01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 10 01 JB code celcr.3.22roq 265 282 18 Chapter 22 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">14. Motives and motifs in visual thematics</TitleText> 1 A01 Georges Roque Roque, Georges Georges Roque Centre National de la Recherche Scienti ?que,Paris 10 01 JB code celcr.3.23sec Section header 23 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 2. Interpretive approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.24gio 283 300 18 Chapter 24 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">15. Masking one’s themes</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Irony and the politics of indirectness</Subtitle> 1 A01 Rachel Giora Giora, Rachel Rachel Giora Tel Aviv University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.25hjo 301 320 20 Chapter 25 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">16. Themes of nation</TitleText> 1 A01 Mette Hjort Hjort, Mette Mette Hjort Aalborg University and the University of Hong Kong 10 01 JB code celcr.3.26dae 321 339 19 Chapter 26 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">17. Tracking a theme</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">War in contemporary German literature</Subtitle> 1 A01 Horst S. Daemmrich Daemmrich, Horst S. Horst S. Daemmrich University of Pennsylvania 10 01 JB code celcr.3.27wol 341 352 12 Chapter 27 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">18. Why themes matter</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Literary knowledge and the thematic example of money</Subtitle> 1 A01 Phillipp Wolf Wolf, Phillipp Phillipp Wolf University of Gießen 10 01 JB code celcr.3.28sec Section header 28 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 3. Computational approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.29hog 353 376 24 Chapter 29 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">19. Moving targets</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">The making and molding of a theme</Subtitle> 1 A01 Robert Hogenraad Hogenraad, Robert Robert Hogenraad Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium 10 01 JB code celcr.3.30mar 377 395 19 Chapter 30 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">20. Quantitative hermeneutics</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Inferring the meaning of narratives from trends in their content</Subtitle> 1 A01 Colin Martindale Martindale, Colin Colin Martindale University of Maine 2 A01 Alan N. West West, Alan N. Alan N. West Dartmouth Medical School 10 01 JB code celcr.3.31for 397 405 9 Chapter 31 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">21. Prototype effect vs. rarity effect in literary style</TitleText> 1 A01 Paul A. Fortier Fortier, Paul A. Paul A. Fortier University of Manitoba 10 01 JB code celcr.3.32chr 407 431 25 Chapter 32 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">22. Parsing for the <i>theme</i></TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">A computer based approach</Subtitle> 1 A01 Jan Christoph Meister Christoph Meister, Jan Jan Christoph Meister University of Hamburg 10 01 JB code celcr.3.33nam 433 442 10 Miscellaneous 33 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Name index</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.34sub 443 448 6 Miscellaneous 34 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Subject index</TitleText> 02 JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam/Philadelphia NL 04 20020529 2002 John Benjamins 02 WORLD 13 15 9789027238887 01 JB 3 John Benjamins e-Platform 03 jbe-platform.com 09 WORLD 21 01 06 Institutional price 00 135.00 EUR R 01 05 Consumer price 00 58.00 EUR R 01 06 Institutional price 00 113.00 GBP Z 01 05 Consumer price 00 49.00 GBP Z 01 06 Institutional price inst 00 203.00 USD S 01 05 Consumer price cons 00 87.00 USD S 1771 03 01 01 JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code CELCR 3 Hb 15 9789027238887 13 2001056472 BB 01 CELCR 02 1566-7774 Converging Evidence in Language and Communication Research 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Thematics</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Interdisciplinary Studies</Subtitle> 01 celcr.3 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/celcr.3 1 B01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 2 B01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 01 eng 458 x 448 LAN009000 v.2006 CF 2 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.DISC Discourse studies 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PRAG Pragmatics 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PSYLIN Psycholinguistics 05 06 01 Themes play a central role in our everyday communication: we have to know what a text is about in order to understand it. Intended meaning cannot be understood without some knowledge of the underlying theme. This book helps to define the concept of &#8216;themes&#8217; in texts and how they are structured in language use.<br />Much of the literature on Thematics is scattered over different disciplines (literature, psychology, linguistics, cognitive science), which this detailed collection pulls together in one coherent overview. The result is a new landmark for the study and understanding of themes in their everyday manifestation. 05 "Thematics: Interdisciplinary Studies", edited by Max Louwerse and Willie van Peer, is obviously an essential book for academics from various disciplines concerned by thematics. The book is well balanced between theoretical and practical aspects. It also demonstrates clearly the importance of an interdisciplinary point of view to the study and analysis of thematics. Furthermore, it presents a good overview of the 'classical' perspective to the problem of thematics. It allows the reader to understand the importance and the complexity of the subject. Researchers concerned by the computational approach to thematic analysis will find in the section "Computational Approaches" very interesting methods of analysis endorsed by relevant experiments. Dominic Forest, in Linguist List Vol. 14-2171 04 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/celcr.3.png 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027238887.jpg 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027238887.tif 06 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/celcr.3.hb.png 07 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/celcr.3.png 25 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/celcr.3.hb.png 27 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/celcr.3.hb.png 10 01 JB code celcr.3.01pre ix 1 Miscellaneous 1 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Preface</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.02lou 1 13 13 Miscellaneous 2 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Introduction</TitleText> 1 A01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 2 A01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 10 01 JB code celcr.3.03par 15 18 4 Section header 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Part I. Structure and processing</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.04sec Section header 4 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 1. Theoretical approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.05gra 19 34 16 Chapter 5 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">1. Psychological and computational research on theme comprehension</TitleText> 1 A01 Arthur C. Graesser Graesser, Arthur C. Arthur C. Graesser University of Memphis 2 A01 Victoria J. Pomeroy Pomeroy, Victoria J. Victoria J. Pomeroy University of Memphis 3 A01 Scotty D. Craig Craig, Scotty D. Scotty D. Craig University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.06zwa 35 53 19 Chapter 6 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">2. Situation models and themes</TitleText> 1 A01 Rolf A. Zwaan Zwaan, Rolf A. Rolf A. Zwaan Florida State University 2 A01 Gabriel A. Radvansky Radvansky, Gabriel A. Gabriel A. Radvansky University of Notre Dame 3 A01 Shannon Whitten Whitten, Shannon Shannon Whitten University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.07oos 55 76 22 Chapter 7 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">3. Conditions of updating during reading</TitleText> 1 A01 Herre van Oostendorp Oostendorp, Herre van Herre van Oostendorp Utrecht University 2 A01 José Otero Otero, José José Otero Universidad de Alcalá 3 A01 Juan Miguel Campanario Campanario, Juan Miguel Juan Miguel Campanario Universidad de Alcalá 10 01 JB code celcr.3.08sec Section header 8 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 2. Experimental and corpus linguistic approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.09she 77 90 14 Chapter 9 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">4. Evaluation devices as a coordinating mechanism for story points</TitleText> 1 A01 Yeshayahu Shen Shen, Yeshayahu Yeshayahu Shen Tel Aviv University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.10emm 91 117 27 Chapter 10 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">5. Responding to style</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Cohesion, foregrounding and thematic interpretation</Subtitle> 1 A01 Catherine Emmott Emmott, Catherine Catherine Emmott University of Glasgow 10 01 JB code celcr.3.11ger 119 136 18 Chapter 11 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">6. The definite article <i>the</i> as a cue to map thematic information</TitleText> 1 A01 Morton Ann Gernsbacher Gernsbacher, Morton Ann Morton Ann Gernsbacher University of Wisconsin-Madison 2 A01 Rachel Robertson Robertson, Rachel Rachel Robertson University of Wisconsin-Madison 10 01 JB code celcr.3.12kim 137 156 20 Chapter 12 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">7. Thematic management in Korean</TitleText> 1 A01 Myung-Hee Kim Kim, Myung-Hee Myung-Hee Kim Hanyang University, Korea 10 01 JB code celcr.3.13sec Section header 13 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 3. Computational approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.14kin 157 170 14 Chapter 14 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">8. On the notions of theme and topic in psychological process models of text comprehension</TitleText> 1 A01 Walter Kintsch Kintsch, Walter Walter Kintsch University of Colorado 10 01 JB code celcr.3.15le 171 187 17 Chapter 15 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">9. Themes and hierarchical structure of written texts</TitleText> 1 A01 Élisabeth Le Le, Élisabeth Élisabeth Le University of Alberta 10 01 JB code celcr.3.16lou 189 212 24 Chapter 16 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">10. Computational retrieval of themes</TitleText> 1 A01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.17par 213 216 4 Section header 17 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Part II. Contents and contexts</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.18sec Section header 18 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 1. Theoretical approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.19sol 217 235 19 Chapter 19 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">11. Thematics today</TitleText> 1 A01 Werner Sollors Sollors, Werner Werner Sollors Harvard University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.20pet 237 252 16 Chapter 20 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">12. Seven trends in recent thematics and a case study</TitleText> 1 A01 Bo Pettersson Pettersson, Bo Bo Pettersson University of Helsinki 10 01 JB code celcr.3.21pee 253 263 11 Chapter 21 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">13. Where do literary themes come from?</TitleText> 1 A01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 10 01 JB code celcr.3.22roq 265 282 18 Chapter 22 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">14. Motives and motifs in visual thematics</TitleText> 1 A01 Georges Roque Roque, Georges Georges Roque Centre National de la Recherche Scienti ?que,Paris 10 01 JB code celcr.3.23sec Section header 23 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 2. Interpretive approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.24gio 283 300 18 Chapter 24 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">15. Masking one’s themes</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Irony and the politics of indirectness</Subtitle> 1 A01 Rachel Giora Giora, Rachel Rachel Giora Tel Aviv University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.25hjo 301 320 20 Chapter 25 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">16. Themes of nation</TitleText> 1 A01 Mette Hjort Hjort, Mette Mette Hjort Aalborg University and the University of Hong Kong 10 01 JB code celcr.3.26dae 321 339 19 Chapter 26 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">17. Tracking a theme</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">War in contemporary German literature</Subtitle> 1 A01 Horst S. Daemmrich Daemmrich, Horst S. Horst S. Daemmrich University of Pennsylvania 10 01 JB code celcr.3.27wol 341 352 12 Chapter 27 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">18. Why themes matter</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Literary knowledge and the thematic example of money</Subtitle> 1 A01 Phillipp Wolf Wolf, Phillipp Phillipp Wolf University of Gießen 10 01 JB code celcr.3.28sec Section header 28 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 3. Computational approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.29hog 353 376 24 Chapter 29 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">19. Moving targets</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">The making and molding of a theme</Subtitle> 1 A01 Robert Hogenraad Hogenraad, Robert Robert Hogenraad Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium 10 01 JB code celcr.3.30mar 377 395 19 Chapter 30 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">20. Quantitative hermeneutics</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Inferring the meaning of narratives from trends in their content</Subtitle> 1 A01 Colin Martindale Martindale, Colin Colin Martindale University of Maine 2 A01 Alan N. West West, Alan N. Alan N. West Dartmouth Medical School 10 01 JB code celcr.3.31for 397 405 9 Chapter 31 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">21. Prototype effect vs. rarity effect in literary style</TitleText> 1 A01 Paul A. Fortier Fortier, Paul A. Paul A. Fortier University of Manitoba 10 01 JB code celcr.3.32chr 407 431 25 Chapter 32 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">22. Parsing for the <i>theme</i></TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">A computer based approach</Subtitle> 1 A01 Jan Christoph Meister Christoph Meister, Jan Jan Christoph Meister University of Hamburg 10 01 JB code celcr.3.33nam 433 442 10 Miscellaneous 33 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Name index</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.34sub 443 448 6 Miscellaneous 34 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Subject index</TitleText> 02 JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam/Philadelphia NL 04 20020529 2002 John Benjamins 04 US CA MX 08 750 gr 01 JB 1 John Benjamins Publishing Company +31 20 6304747 +31 20 6739773 bookorder@benjamins.nl 01 https://benjamins.com 01 WORLD US CA MX 21 6 24 01 02 JB 1 00 135.00 EUR R 02 02 JB 1 00 143.10 EUR R 01 JB 10 bebc +44 1202 712 934 +44 1202 712 913 sales@bebc.co.uk 03 GB 21 24 02 02 JB 1 00 113.00 GBP Z 1771 03 01 01 JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code CELCR 3 Hb 15 9781588111074 13 2001056472 BB 01 CELCR 02 1566-7774 Converging Evidence in Language and Communication Research 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Thematics</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Interdisciplinary Studies</Subtitle> 01 celcr.3 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/celcr.3 1 B01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 2 B01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 01 eng 458 x 448 LAN009000 v.2006 CF 2 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.DISC Discourse studies 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PRAG Pragmatics 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PSYLIN Psycholinguistics 05 06 01 Themes play a central role in our everyday communication: we have to know what a text is about in order to understand it. Intended meaning cannot be understood without some knowledge of the underlying theme. This book helps to define the concept of &#8216;themes&#8217; in texts and how they are structured in language use.<br />Much of the literature on Thematics is scattered over different disciplines (literature, psychology, linguistics, cognitive science), which this detailed collection pulls together in one coherent overview. The result is a new landmark for the study and understanding of themes in their everyday manifestation. 05 "Thematics: Interdisciplinary Studies", edited by Max Louwerse and Willie van Peer, is obviously an essential book for academics from various disciplines concerned by thematics. The book is well balanced between theoretical and practical aspects. It also demonstrates clearly the importance of an interdisciplinary point of view to the study and analysis of thematics. Furthermore, it presents a good overview of the 'classical' perspective to the problem of thematics. It allows the reader to understand the importance and the complexity of the subject. Researchers concerned by the computational approach to thematic analysis will find in the section "Computational Approaches" very interesting methods of analysis endorsed by relevant experiments. Dominic Forest, in Linguist List Vol. 14-2171 04 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/celcr.3.png 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027238887.jpg 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027238887.tif 06 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/celcr.3.hb.png 07 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/celcr.3.png 25 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/celcr.3.hb.png 27 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/celcr.3.hb.png 10 01 JB code celcr.3.01pre ix 1 Miscellaneous 1 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Preface</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.02lou 1 13 13 Miscellaneous 2 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Introduction</TitleText> 1 A01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 2 A01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 10 01 JB code celcr.3.03par 15 18 4 Section header 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Part I. Structure and processing</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.04sec Section header 4 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 1. Theoretical approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.05gra 19 34 16 Chapter 5 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">1. Psychological and computational research on theme comprehension</TitleText> 1 A01 Arthur C. Graesser Graesser, Arthur C. Arthur C. Graesser University of Memphis 2 A01 Victoria J. Pomeroy Pomeroy, Victoria J. Victoria J. Pomeroy University of Memphis 3 A01 Scotty D. Craig Craig, Scotty D. Scotty D. Craig University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.06zwa 35 53 19 Chapter 6 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">2. Situation models and themes</TitleText> 1 A01 Rolf A. Zwaan Zwaan, Rolf A. Rolf A. Zwaan Florida State University 2 A01 Gabriel A. Radvansky Radvansky, Gabriel A. Gabriel A. Radvansky University of Notre Dame 3 A01 Shannon Whitten Whitten, Shannon Shannon Whitten University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.07oos 55 76 22 Chapter 7 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">3. Conditions of updating during reading</TitleText> 1 A01 Herre van Oostendorp Oostendorp, Herre van Herre van Oostendorp Utrecht University 2 A01 José Otero Otero, José José Otero Universidad de Alcalá 3 A01 Juan Miguel Campanario Campanario, Juan Miguel Juan Miguel Campanario Universidad de Alcalá 10 01 JB code celcr.3.08sec Section header 8 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 2. Experimental and corpus linguistic approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.09she 77 90 14 Chapter 9 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">4. Evaluation devices as a coordinating mechanism for story points</TitleText> 1 A01 Yeshayahu Shen Shen, Yeshayahu Yeshayahu Shen Tel Aviv University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.10emm 91 117 27 Chapter 10 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">5. Responding to style</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Cohesion, foregrounding and thematic interpretation</Subtitle> 1 A01 Catherine Emmott Emmott, Catherine Catherine Emmott University of Glasgow 10 01 JB code celcr.3.11ger 119 136 18 Chapter 11 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">6. The definite article <i>the</i> as a cue to map thematic information</TitleText> 1 A01 Morton Ann Gernsbacher Gernsbacher, Morton Ann Morton Ann Gernsbacher University of Wisconsin-Madison 2 A01 Rachel Robertson Robertson, Rachel Rachel Robertson University of Wisconsin-Madison 10 01 JB code celcr.3.12kim 137 156 20 Chapter 12 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">7. Thematic management in Korean</TitleText> 1 A01 Myung-Hee Kim Kim, Myung-Hee Myung-Hee Kim Hanyang University, Korea 10 01 JB code celcr.3.13sec Section header 13 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 3. Computational approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.14kin 157 170 14 Chapter 14 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">8. On the notions of theme and topic in psychological process models of text comprehension</TitleText> 1 A01 Walter Kintsch Kintsch, Walter Walter Kintsch University of Colorado 10 01 JB code celcr.3.15le 171 187 17 Chapter 15 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">9. Themes and hierarchical structure of written texts</TitleText> 1 A01 Élisabeth Le Le, Élisabeth Élisabeth Le University of Alberta 10 01 JB code celcr.3.16lou 189 212 24 Chapter 16 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">10. Computational retrieval of themes</TitleText> 1 A01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.17par 213 216 4 Section header 17 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Part II. Contents and contexts</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.18sec Section header 18 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 1. Theoretical approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.19sol 217 235 19 Chapter 19 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">11. Thematics today</TitleText> 1 A01 Werner Sollors Sollors, Werner Werner Sollors Harvard University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.20pet 237 252 16 Chapter 20 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">12. Seven trends in recent thematics and a case study</TitleText> 1 A01 Bo Pettersson Pettersson, Bo Bo Pettersson University of Helsinki 10 01 JB code celcr.3.21pee 253 263 11 Chapter 21 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">13. Where do literary themes come from?</TitleText> 1 A01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 10 01 JB code celcr.3.22roq 265 282 18 Chapter 22 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">14. Motives and motifs in visual thematics</TitleText> 1 A01 Georges Roque Roque, Georges Georges Roque Centre National de la Recherche Scienti ?que,Paris 10 01 JB code celcr.3.23sec Section header 23 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 2. Interpretive approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.24gio 283 300 18 Chapter 24 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">15. Masking one’s themes</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Irony and the politics of indirectness</Subtitle> 1 A01 Rachel Giora Giora, Rachel Rachel Giora Tel Aviv University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.25hjo 301 320 20 Chapter 25 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">16. Themes of nation</TitleText> 1 A01 Mette Hjort Hjort, Mette Mette Hjort Aalborg University and the University of Hong Kong 10 01 JB code celcr.3.26dae 321 339 19 Chapter 26 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">17. Tracking a theme</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">War in contemporary German literature</Subtitle> 1 A01 Horst S. Daemmrich Daemmrich, Horst S. Horst S. Daemmrich University of Pennsylvania 10 01 JB code celcr.3.27wol 341 352 12 Chapter 27 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">18. Why themes matter</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Literary knowledge and the thematic example of money</Subtitle> 1 A01 Phillipp Wolf Wolf, Phillipp Phillipp Wolf University of Gießen 10 01 JB code celcr.3.28sec Section header 28 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 3. Computational approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.29hog 353 376 24 Chapter 29 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">19. Moving targets</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">The making and molding of a theme</Subtitle> 1 A01 Robert Hogenraad Hogenraad, Robert Robert Hogenraad Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium 10 01 JB code celcr.3.30mar 377 395 19 Chapter 30 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">20. Quantitative hermeneutics</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Inferring the meaning of narratives from trends in their content</Subtitle> 1 A01 Colin Martindale Martindale, Colin Colin Martindale University of Maine 2 A01 Alan N. West West, Alan N. Alan N. West Dartmouth Medical School 10 01 JB code celcr.3.31for 397 405 9 Chapter 31 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">21. Prototype effect vs. rarity effect in literary style</TitleText> 1 A01 Paul A. Fortier Fortier, Paul A. Paul A. Fortier University of Manitoba 10 01 JB code celcr.3.32chr 407 431 25 Chapter 32 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">22. Parsing for the <i>theme</i></TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">A computer based approach</Subtitle> 1 A01 Jan Christoph Meister Christoph Meister, Jan Jan Christoph Meister University of Hamburg 10 01 JB code celcr.3.33nam 433 442 10 Miscellaneous 33 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Name index</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.34sub 443 448 6 Miscellaneous 34 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Subject index</TitleText> 02 JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam/Philadelphia NL 04 20020529 2002 John Benjamins 02 US CA MX 08 750 gr 01 JB 2 John Benjamins North America +1 800 562-5666 +1 703 661-1501 benjamins@presswarehouse.com 01 https://benjamins.com 01 US CA MX 21 24 01 gen 02 JB 1 00 203.00 USD 399004512 03 01 01 JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code CELCR 3 Pb 15 9789027238894 13 2001056472 BC 01 CELCR 02 1566-7774 Converging Evidence in Language and Communication Research 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Thematics</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Interdisciplinary Studies</Subtitle> 01 celcr.3 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/celcr.3 1 B01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 2 B01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 01 eng 458 x 448 LAN009000 v.2006 CF 2 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.DISC Discourse studies 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PRAG Pragmatics 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PSYLIN Psycholinguistics 05 06 01 Themes play a central role in our everyday communication: we have to know what a text is about in order to understand it. Intended meaning cannot be understood without some knowledge of the underlying theme. This book helps to define the concept of &#8216;themes&#8217; in texts and how they are structured in language use.<br />Much of the literature on Thematics is scattered over different disciplines (literature, psychology, linguistics, cognitive science), which this detailed collection pulls together in one coherent overview. The result is a new landmark for the study and understanding of themes in their everyday manifestation. 05 "Thematics: Interdisciplinary Studies", edited by Max Louwerse and Willie van Peer, is obviously an essential book for academics from various disciplines concerned by thematics. The book is well balanced between theoretical and practical aspects. It also demonstrates clearly the importance of an interdisciplinary point of view to the study and analysis of thematics. Furthermore, it presents a good overview of the 'classical' perspective to the problem of thematics. It allows the reader to understand the importance and the complexity of the subject. Researchers concerned by the computational approach to thematic analysis will find in the section "Computational Approaches" very interesting methods of analysis endorsed by relevant experiments. Dominic Forest, in Linguist List Vol. 14-2171 04 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/celcr.3.png 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027238887.jpg 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027238887.tif 06 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/celcr.3.pb.png 07 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/celcr.3.png 25 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/celcr.3.pb.png 27 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/celcr.3.pb.png 10 01 JB code celcr.3.01pre ix 1 Miscellaneous 1 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Preface</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.02lou 1 13 13 Miscellaneous 2 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Introduction</TitleText> 1 A01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 2 A01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 10 01 JB code celcr.3.03par 15 18 4 Section header 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Part I. Structure and processing</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.04sec Section header 4 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 1. Theoretical approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.05gra 19 34 16 Chapter 5 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">1. Psychological and computational research on theme comprehension</TitleText> 1 A01 Arthur C. Graesser Graesser, Arthur C. Arthur C. Graesser University of Memphis 2 A01 Victoria J. Pomeroy Pomeroy, Victoria J. Victoria J. Pomeroy University of Memphis 3 A01 Scotty D. Craig Craig, Scotty D. Scotty D. Craig University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.06zwa 35 53 19 Chapter 6 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">2. Situation models and themes</TitleText> 1 A01 Rolf A. Zwaan Zwaan, Rolf A. Rolf A. Zwaan Florida State University 2 A01 Gabriel A. Radvansky Radvansky, Gabriel A. Gabriel A. Radvansky University of Notre Dame 3 A01 Shannon Whitten Whitten, Shannon Shannon Whitten University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.07oos 55 76 22 Chapter 7 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">3. Conditions of updating during reading</TitleText> 1 A01 Herre van Oostendorp Oostendorp, Herre van Herre van Oostendorp Utrecht University 2 A01 José Otero Otero, José José Otero Universidad de Alcalá 3 A01 Juan Miguel Campanario Campanario, Juan Miguel Juan Miguel Campanario Universidad de Alcalá 10 01 JB code celcr.3.08sec Section header 8 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 2. Experimental and corpus linguistic approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.09she 77 90 14 Chapter 9 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">4. Evaluation devices as a coordinating mechanism for story points</TitleText> 1 A01 Yeshayahu Shen Shen, Yeshayahu Yeshayahu Shen Tel Aviv University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.10emm 91 117 27 Chapter 10 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">5. Responding to style</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Cohesion, foregrounding and thematic interpretation</Subtitle> 1 A01 Catherine Emmott Emmott, Catherine Catherine Emmott University of Glasgow 10 01 JB code celcr.3.11ger 119 136 18 Chapter 11 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">6. The definite article <i>the</i> as a cue to map thematic information</TitleText> 1 A01 Morton Ann Gernsbacher Gernsbacher, Morton Ann Morton Ann Gernsbacher University of Wisconsin-Madison 2 A01 Rachel Robertson Robertson, Rachel Rachel Robertson University of Wisconsin-Madison 10 01 JB code celcr.3.12kim 137 156 20 Chapter 12 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">7. Thematic management in Korean</TitleText> 1 A01 Myung-Hee Kim Kim, Myung-Hee Myung-Hee Kim Hanyang University, Korea 10 01 JB code celcr.3.13sec Section header 13 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 3. Computational approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.14kin 157 170 14 Chapter 14 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">8. On the notions of theme and topic in psychological process models of text comprehension</TitleText> 1 A01 Walter Kintsch Kintsch, Walter Walter Kintsch University of Colorado 10 01 JB code celcr.3.15le 171 187 17 Chapter 15 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">9. Themes and hierarchical structure of written texts</TitleText> 1 A01 Élisabeth Le Le, Élisabeth Élisabeth Le University of Alberta 10 01 JB code celcr.3.16lou 189 212 24 Chapter 16 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">10. Computational retrieval of themes</TitleText> 1 A01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.17par 213 216 4 Section header 17 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Part II. Contents and contexts</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.18sec Section header 18 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 1. Theoretical approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.19sol 217 235 19 Chapter 19 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">11. Thematics today</TitleText> 1 A01 Werner Sollors Sollors, Werner Werner Sollors Harvard University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.20pet 237 252 16 Chapter 20 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">12. Seven trends in recent thematics and a case study</TitleText> 1 A01 Bo Pettersson Pettersson, Bo Bo Pettersson University of Helsinki 10 01 JB code celcr.3.21pee 253 263 11 Chapter 21 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">13. Where do literary themes come from?</TitleText> 1 A01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 10 01 JB code celcr.3.22roq 265 282 18 Chapter 22 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">14. Motives and motifs in visual thematics</TitleText> 1 A01 Georges Roque Roque, Georges Georges Roque Centre National de la Recherche Scienti ?que,Paris 10 01 JB code celcr.3.23sec Section header 23 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 2. Interpretive approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.24gio 283 300 18 Chapter 24 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">15. Masking one’s themes</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Irony and the politics of indirectness</Subtitle> 1 A01 Rachel Giora Giora, Rachel Rachel Giora Tel Aviv University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.25hjo 301 320 20 Chapter 25 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">16. Themes of nation</TitleText> 1 A01 Mette Hjort Hjort, Mette Mette Hjort Aalborg University and the University of Hong Kong 10 01 JB code celcr.3.26dae 321 339 19 Chapter 26 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">17. Tracking a theme</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">War in contemporary German literature</Subtitle> 1 A01 Horst S. Daemmrich Daemmrich, Horst S. Horst S. Daemmrich University of Pennsylvania 10 01 JB code celcr.3.27wol 341 352 12 Chapter 27 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">18. Why themes matter</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Literary knowledge and the thematic example of money</Subtitle> 1 A01 Phillipp Wolf Wolf, Phillipp Phillipp Wolf University of Gießen 10 01 JB code celcr.3.28sec Section header 28 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 3. Computational approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.29hog 353 376 24 Chapter 29 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">19. Moving targets</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">The making and molding of a theme</Subtitle> 1 A01 Robert Hogenraad Hogenraad, Robert Robert Hogenraad Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium 10 01 JB code celcr.3.30mar 377 395 19 Chapter 30 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">20. Quantitative hermeneutics</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Inferring the meaning of narratives from trends in their content</Subtitle> 1 A01 Colin Martindale Martindale, Colin Colin Martindale University of Maine 2 A01 Alan N. West West, Alan N. Alan N. West Dartmouth Medical School 10 01 JB code celcr.3.31for 397 405 9 Chapter 31 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">21. Prototype effect vs. rarity effect in literary style</TitleText> 1 A01 Paul A. Fortier Fortier, Paul A. Paul A. Fortier University of Manitoba 10 01 JB code celcr.3.32chr 407 431 25 Chapter 32 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">22. Parsing for the <i>theme</i></TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">A computer based approach</Subtitle> 1 A01 Jan Christoph Meister Christoph Meister, Jan Jan Christoph Meister University of Hamburg 10 01 JB code celcr.3.33nam 433 442 10 Miscellaneous 33 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Name index</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.34sub 443 448 6 Miscellaneous 34 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Subject index</TitleText> 02 JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam/Philadelphia NL 04 20020529 2002 John Benjamins 04 US CA MX 08 645 gr 01 JB 1 John Benjamins Publishing Company +31 20 6304747 +31 20 6739773 bookorder@benjamins.nl 01 https://benjamins.com 01 WORLD US CA MX 21 22 20 01 02 JB 1 00 58.00 EUR R 02 02 JB 1 00 61.48 EUR R 01 JB 10 bebc +44 1202 712 934 +44 1202 712 913 sales@bebc.co.uk 03 GB 21 20 02 02 JB 1 00 49.00 GBP Z 399004512 03 01 01 JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code CELCR 3 Pb 15 9781588112828 13 2001056472 BC 01 CELCR 02 1566-7774 Converging Evidence in Language and Communication Research 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Thematics</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Interdisciplinary Studies</Subtitle> 01 celcr.3 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/celcr.3 1 B01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 2 B01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 01 eng 458 x 448 LAN009000 v.2006 CF 2 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.DISC Discourse studies 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PRAG Pragmatics 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PSYLIN Psycholinguistics 05 06 01 Themes play a central role in our everyday communication: we have to know what a text is about in order to understand it. Intended meaning cannot be understood without some knowledge of the underlying theme. This book helps to define the concept of &#8216;themes&#8217; in texts and how they are structured in language use.<br />Much of the literature on Thematics is scattered over different disciplines (literature, psychology, linguistics, cognitive science), which this detailed collection pulls together in one coherent overview. The result is a new landmark for the study and understanding of themes in their everyday manifestation. 05 "Thematics: Interdisciplinary Studies", edited by Max Louwerse and Willie van Peer, is obviously an essential book for academics from various disciplines concerned by thematics. The book is well balanced between theoretical and practical aspects. It also demonstrates clearly the importance of an interdisciplinary point of view to the study and analysis of thematics. Furthermore, it presents a good overview of the 'classical' perspective to the problem of thematics. It allows the reader to understand the importance and the complexity of the subject. Researchers concerned by the computational approach to thematic analysis will find in the section "Computational Approaches" very interesting methods of analysis endorsed by relevant experiments. Dominic Forest, in Linguist List Vol. 14-2171 04 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/celcr.3.png 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027238887.jpg 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027238887.tif 06 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/celcr.3.pb.png 07 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/celcr.3.png 25 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/celcr.3.pb.png 27 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/celcr.3.pb.png 10 01 JB code celcr.3.01pre ix 1 Miscellaneous 1 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Preface</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.02lou 1 13 13 Miscellaneous 2 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Introduction</TitleText> 1 A01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 2 A01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 10 01 JB code celcr.3.03par 15 18 4 Section header 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Part I. Structure and processing</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.04sec Section header 4 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 1. Theoretical approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.05gra 19 34 16 Chapter 5 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">1. Psychological and computational research on theme comprehension</TitleText> 1 A01 Arthur C. Graesser Graesser, Arthur C. Arthur C. Graesser University of Memphis 2 A01 Victoria J. Pomeroy Pomeroy, Victoria J. Victoria J. Pomeroy University of Memphis 3 A01 Scotty D. Craig Craig, Scotty D. Scotty D. Craig University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.06zwa 35 53 19 Chapter 6 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">2. Situation models and themes</TitleText> 1 A01 Rolf A. Zwaan Zwaan, Rolf A. Rolf A. Zwaan Florida State University 2 A01 Gabriel A. Radvansky Radvansky, Gabriel A. Gabriel A. Radvansky University of Notre Dame 3 A01 Shannon Whitten Whitten, Shannon Shannon Whitten University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.07oos 55 76 22 Chapter 7 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">3. Conditions of updating during reading</TitleText> 1 A01 Herre van Oostendorp Oostendorp, Herre van Herre van Oostendorp Utrecht University 2 A01 José Otero Otero, José José Otero Universidad de Alcalá 3 A01 Juan Miguel Campanario Campanario, Juan Miguel Juan Miguel Campanario Universidad de Alcalá 10 01 JB code celcr.3.08sec Section header 8 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 2. Experimental and corpus linguistic approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.09she 77 90 14 Chapter 9 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">4. Evaluation devices as a coordinating mechanism for story points</TitleText> 1 A01 Yeshayahu Shen Shen, Yeshayahu Yeshayahu Shen Tel Aviv University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.10emm 91 117 27 Chapter 10 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">5. Responding to style</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Cohesion, foregrounding and thematic interpretation</Subtitle> 1 A01 Catherine Emmott Emmott, Catherine Catherine Emmott University of Glasgow 10 01 JB code celcr.3.11ger 119 136 18 Chapter 11 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">6. The definite article <i>the</i> as a cue to map thematic information</TitleText> 1 A01 Morton Ann Gernsbacher Gernsbacher, Morton Ann Morton Ann Gernsbacher University of Wisconsin-Madison 2 A01 Rachel Robertson Robertson, Rachel Rachel Robertson University of Wisconsin-Madison 10 01 JB code celcr.3.12kim 137 156 20 Chapter 12 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">7. Thematic management in Korean</TitleText> 1 A01 Myung-Hee Kim Kim, Myung-Hee Myung-Hee Kim Hanyang University, Korea 10 01 JB code celcr.3.13sec Section header 13 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 3. Computational approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.14kin 157 170 14 Chapter 14 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">8. On the notions of theme and topic in psychological process models of text comprehension</TitleText> 1 A01 Walter Kintsch Kintsch, Walter Walter Kintsch University of Colorado 10 01 JB code celcr.3.15le 171 187 17 Chapter 15 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">9. Themes and hierarchical structure of written texts</TitleText> 1 A01 Élisabeth Le Le, Élisabeth Élisabeth Le University of Alberta 10 01 JB code celcr.3.16lou 189 212 24 Chapter 16 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">10. Computational retrieval of themes</TitleText> 1 A01 Max M. Louwerse Louwerse, Max M. Max M. Louwerse University of Memphis 10 01 JB code celcr.3.17par 213 216 4 Section header 17 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Part II. Contents and contexts</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.18sec Section header 18 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 1. Theoretical approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.19sol 217 235 19 Chapter 19 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">11. Thematics today</TitleText> 1 A01 Werner Sollors Sollors, Werner Werner Sollors Harvard University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.20pet 237 252 16 Chapter 20 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">12. Seven trends in recent thematics and a case study</TitleText> 1 A01 Bo Pettersson Pettersson, Bo Bo Pettersson University of Helsinki 10 01 JB code celcr.3.21pee 253 263 11 Chapter 21 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">13. Where do literary themes come from?</TitleText> 1 A01 Willie van Peer Peer, Willie van Willie van Peer University of Munich 10 01 JB code celcr.3.22roq 265 282 18 Chapter 22 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">14. Motives and motifs in visual thematics</TitleText> 1 A01 Georges Roque Roque, Georges Georges Roque Centre National de la Recherche Scienti ?que,Paris 10 01 JB code celcr.3.23sec Section header 23 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 2. Interpretive approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.24gio 283 300 18 Chapter 24 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">15. Masking one’s themes</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Irony and the politics of indirectness</Subtitle> 1 A01 Rachel Giora Giora, Rachel Rachel Giora Tel Aviv University 10 01 JB code celcr.3.25hjo 301 320 20 Chapter 25 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">16. Themes of nation</TitleText> 1 A01 Mette Hjort Hjort, Mette Mette Hjort Aalborg University and the University of Hong Kong 10 01 JB code celcr.3.26dae 321 339 19 Chapter 26 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">17. Tracking a theme</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">War in contemporary German literature</Subtitle> 1 A01 Horst S. Daemmrich Daemmrich, Horst S. Horst S. Daemmrich University of Pennsylvania 10 01 JB code celcr.3.27wol 341 352 12 Chapter 27 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">18. Why themes matter</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Literary knowledge and the thematic example of money</Subtitle> 1 A01 Phillipp Wolf Wolf, Phillipp Phillipp Wolf University of Gießen 10 01 JB code celcr.3.28sec Section header 28 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Section 3. Computational approaches</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.29hog 353 376 24 Chapter 29 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">19. Moving targets</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">The making and molding of a theme</Subtitle> 1 A01 Robert Hogenraad Hogenraad, Robert Robert Hogenraad Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium 10 01 JB code celcr.3.30mar 377 395 19 Chapter 30 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">20. Quantitative hermeneutics</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Inferring the meaning of narratives from trends in their content</Subtitle> 1 A01 Colin Martindale Martindale, Colin Colin Martindale University of Maine 2 A01 Alan N. West West, Alan N. Alan N. West Dartmouth Medical School 10 01 JB code celcr.3.31for 397 405 9 Chapter 31 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">21. Prototype effect vs. rarity effect in literary style</TitleText> 1 A01 Paul A. Fortier Fortier, Paul A. Paul A. Fortier University of Manitoba 10 01 JB code celcr.3.32chr 407 431 25 Chapter 32 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">22. Parsing for the <i>theme</i></TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">A computer based approach</Subtitle> 1 A01 Jan Christoph Meister Christoph Meister, Jan Jan Christoph Meister University of Hamburg 10 01 JB code celcr.3.33nam 433 442 10 Miscellaneous 33 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Name index</TitleText> 10 01 JB code celcr.3.34sub 443 448 6 Miscellaneous 34 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Subject index</TitleText> 02 JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam/Philadelphia NL 04 20020529 2002 John Benjamins 02 US CA MX 08 645 gr 01 JB 2 John Benjamins North America +1 800 562-5666 +1 703 661-1501 benjamins@presswarehouse.com 01 https://benjamins.com 01 US CA MX 21 20 01 gen 02 JB 1 00 87.00 USD