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John Benjamins Publishing Company
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ONIX title feed
eng
01
EUR
80006374
03
01
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JB
John Benjamins Publishing Company
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JB code
CELCR 3 Eb
15
9789027297785
06
10.1075/celcr.3
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2001056472
DG
002
02
01
CELCR
02
1566-7774
Converging Evidence in Language and Communication Research
3
01
Thematics
Interdisciplinary Studies
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 ‘themes’ 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
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https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/celcr.3.hb.png
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celcr.3.01pre
ix
1
Miscellaneous
1
01
Preface
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.02lou
1
13
13
Miscellaneous
2
01
Introduction
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
01
Part I. Structure and processing
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.04sec
Section header
4
01
Section 1. Theoretical approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.05gra
19
34
16
Chapter
5
01
1. Psychological and computational research on theme comprehension
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
01
2. Situation models and themes
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
01
3. Conditions of updating during reading
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
01
Section 2. Experimental and corpus linguistic approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.09she
77
90
14
Chapter
9
01
4. Evaluation devices as a coordinating mechanism for story points
1
A01
Yeshayahu Shen
Shen, Yeshayahu
Yeshayahu
Shen
Tel Aviv University
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.10emm
91
117
27
Chapter
10
01
5. Responding to style
Cohesion, foregrounding and thematic interpretation
1
A01
Catherine Emmott
Emmott, Catherine
Catherine
Emmott
University of Glasgow
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.11ger
119
136
18
Chapter
11
01
6. The definite article <i>the</i> as a cue to map thematic information
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
01
7. Thematic management in Korean
1
A01
Myung-Hee Kim
Kim, Myung-Hee
Myung-Hee
Kim
Hanyang University, Korea
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.13sec
Section header
13
01
Section 3. Computational approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.14kin
157
170
14
Chapter
14
01
8. On the notions of theme and topic in psychological process models of text comprehension
1
A01
Walter Kintsch
Kintsch, Walter
Walter
Kintsch
University of Colorado
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.15le
171
187
17
Chapter
15
01
9. Themes and hierarchical structure of written texts
1
A01
Élisabeth Le
Le, Élisabeth
Élisabeth
Le
University of Alberta
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.16lou
189
212
24
Chapter
16
01
10. Computational retrieval of themes
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
01
Part II. Contents and contexts
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.18sec
Section header
18
01
Section 1. Theoretical approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.19sol
217
235
19
Chapter
19
01
11. Thematics today
1
A01
Werner Sollors
Sollors, Werner
Werner
Sollors
Harvard University
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.20pet
237
252
16
Chapter
20
01
12. Seven trends in recent thematics and a case study
1
A01
Bo Pettersson
Pettersson, Bo
Bo
Pettersson
University of Helsinki
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.21pee
253
263
11
Chapter
21
01
13. Where do literary themes come from?
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
01
14. Motives and motifs in visual thematics
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
01
Section 2. Interpretive approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.24gio
283
300
18
Chapter
24
01
15. Masking one’s themes
Irony and the politics of indirectness
1
A01
Rachel Giora
Giora, Rachel
Rachel
Giora
Tel Aviv University
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.25hjo
301
320
20
Chapter
25
01
16. Themes of nation
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
01
17. Tracking a theme
War in contemporary German literature
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
01
18. Why themes matter
Literary knowledge and the thematic example of money
1
A01
Phillipp Wolf
Wolf, Phillipp
Phillipp
Wolf
University of Gießen
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.28sec
Section header
28
01
Section 3. Computational approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.29hog
353
376
24
Chapter
29
01
19. Moving targets
The making and molding of a theme
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
01
20. Quantitative hermeneutics
Inferring the meaning of narratives from trends in their content
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
01
21. Prototype effect vs. rarity effect in literary style
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
01
22. Parsing for the <i>theme</i>
A computer based approach
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
01
Name index
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.34sub
443
448
6
Miscellaneous
34
01
Subject index
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
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Institutional price
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00
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Consumer price
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00
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S
1771
03
01
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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
01
Thematics
Interdisciplinary Studies
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 ‘themes’ 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
01
Preface
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.02lou
1
13
13
Miscellaneous
2
01
Introduction
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
01
Part I. Structure and processing
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.04sec
Section header
4
01
Section 1. Theoretical approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.05gra
19
34
16
Chapter
5
01
1. Psychological and computational research on theme comprehension
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
01
2. Situation models and themes
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
01
3. Conditions of updating during reading
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
01
Section 2. Experimental and corpus linguistic approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.09she
77
90
14
Chapter
9
01
4. Evaluation devices as a coordinating mechanism for story points
1
A01
Yeshayahu Shen
Shen, Yeshayahu
Yeshayahu
Shen
Tel Aviv University
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.10emm
91
117
27
Chapter
10
01
5. Responding to style
Cohesion, foregrounding and thematic interpretation
1
A01
Catherine Emmott
Emmott, Catherine
Catherine
Emmott
University of Glasgow
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.11ger
119
136
18
Chapter
11
01
6. The definite article <i>the</i> as a cue to map thematic information
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
01
7. Thematic management in Korean
1
A01
Myung-Hee Kim
Kim, Myung-Hee
Myung-Hee
Kim
Hanyang University, Korea
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.13sec
Section header
13
01
Section 3. Computational approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.14kin
157
170
14
Chapter
14
01
8. On the notions of theme and topic in psychological process models of text comprehension
1
A01
Walter Kintsch
Kintsch, Walter
Walter
Kintsch
University of Colorado
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.15le
171
187
17
Chapter
15
01
9. Themes and hierarchical structure of written texts
1
A01
Élisabeth Le
Le, Élisabeth
Élisabeth
Le
University of Alberta
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.16lou
189
212
24
Chapter
16
01
10. Computational retrieval of themes
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
01
Part II. Contents and contexts
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.18sec
Section header
18
01
Section 1. Theoretical approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.19sol
217
235
19
Chapter
19
01
11. Thematics today
1
A01
Werner Sollors
Sollors, Werner
Werner
Sollors
Harvard University
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.20pet
237
252
16
Chapter
20
01
12. Seven trends in recent thematics and a case study
1
A01
Bo Pettersson
Pettersson, Bo
Bo
Pettersson
University of Helsinki
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.21pee
253
263
11
Chapter
21
01
13. Where do literary themes come from?
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
01
14. Motives and motifs in visual thematics
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
01
Section 2. Interpretive approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.24gio
283
300
18
Chapter
24
01
15. Masking one’s themes
Irony and the politics of indirectness
1
A01
Rachel Giora
Giora, Rachel
Rachel
Giora
Tel Aviv University
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.25hjo
301
320
20
Chapter
25
01
16. Themes of nation
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
01
17. Tracking a theme
War in contemporary German literature
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
01
18. Why themes matter
Literary knowledge and the thematic example of money
1
A01
Phillipp Wolf
Wolf, Phillipp
Phillipp
Wolf
University of Gießen
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.28sec
Section header
28
01
Section 3. Computational approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.29hog
353
376
24
Chapter
29
01
19. Moving targets
The making and molding of a theme
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
01
20. Quantitative hermeneutics
Inferring the meaning of narratives from trends in their content
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
01
21. Prototype effect vs. rarity effect in literary style
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
01
22. Parsing for the <i>theme</i>
A computer based approach
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
01
Name index
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.34sub
443
448
6
Miscellaneous
34
01
Subject index
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
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https://benjamins.com
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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
01
Thematics
Interdisciplinary Studies
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 ‘themes’ 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
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09
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https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/celcr.3.hb.png
07
09
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https://benjamins.com/covers/125/celcr.3.png
25
09
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https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/celcr.3.hb.png
27
09
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https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/celcr.3.hb.png
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.01pre
ix
1
Miscellaneous
1
01
Preface
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.02lou
1
13
13
Miscellaneous
2
01
Introduction
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
01
Part I. Structure and processing
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.04sec
Section header
4
01
Section 1. Theoretical approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.05gra
19
34
16
Chapter
5
01
1. Psychological and computational research on theme comprehension
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
01
2. Situation models and themes
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
01
3. Conditions of updating during reading
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
01
Section 2. Experimental and corpus linguistic approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.09she
77
90
14
Chapter
9
01
4. Evaluation devices as a coordinating mechanism for story points
1
A01
Yeshayahu Shen
Shen, Yeshayahu
Yeshayahu
Shen
Tel Aviv University
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.10emm
91
117
27
Chapter
10
01
5. Responding to style
Cohesion, foregrounding and thematic interpretation
1
A01
Catherine Emmott
Emmott, Catherine
Catherine
Emmott
University of Glasgow
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.11ger
119
136
18
Chapter
11
01
6. The definite article <i>the</i> as a cue to map thematic information
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
01
7. Thematic management in Korean
1
A01
Myung-Hee Kim
Kim, Myung-Hee
Myung-Hee
Kim
Hanyang University, Korea
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.13sec
Section header
13
01
Section 3. Computational approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.14kin
157
170
14
Chapter
14
01
8. On the notions of theme and topic in psychological process models of text comprehension
1
A01
Walter Kintsch
Kintsch, Walter
Walter
Kintsch
University of Colorado
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.15le
171
187
17
Chapter
15
01
9. Themes and hierarchical structure of written texts
1
A01
Élisabeth Le
Le, Élisabeth
Élisabeth
Le
University of Alberta
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.16lou
189
212
24
Chapter
16
01
10. Computational retrieval of themes
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
01
Part II. Contents and contexts
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.18sec
Section header
18
01
Section 1. Theoretical approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.19sol
217
235
19
Chapter
19
01
11. Thematics today
1
A01
Werner Sollors
Sollors, Werner
Werner
Sollors
Harvard University
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.20pet
237
252
16
Chapter
20
01
12. Seven trends in recent thematics and a case study
1
A01
Bo Pettersson
Pettersson, Bo
Bo
Pettersson
University of Helsinki
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.21pee
253
263
11
Chapter
21
01
13. Where do literary themes come from?
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
01
14. Motives and motifs in visual thematics
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
01
Section 2. Interpretive approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.24gio
283
300
18
Chapter
24
01
15. Masking one’s themes
Irony and the politics of indirectness
1
A01
Rachel Giora
Giora, Rachel
Rachel
Giora
Tel Aviv University
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.25hjo
301
320
20
Chapter
25
01
16. Themes of nation
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
01
17. Tracking a theme
War in contemporary German literature
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
01
18. Why themes matter
Literary knowledge and the thematic example of money
1
A01
Phillipp Wolf
Wolf, Phillipp
Phillipp
Wolf
University of Gießen
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.28sec
Section header
28
01
Section 3. Computational approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.29hog
353
376
24
Chapter
29
01
19. Moving targets
The making and molding of a theme
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
01
20. Quantitative hermeneutics
Inferring the meaning of narratives from trends in their content
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
01
21. Prototype effect vs. rarity effect in literary style
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
01
22. Parsing for the <i>theme</i>
A computer based approach
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
01
Name index
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.34sub
443
448
6
Miscellaneous
34
01
Subject index
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
01
Thematics
Interdisciplinary Studies
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 ‘themes’ 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
01
Preface
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.02lou
1
13
13
Miscellaneous
2
01
Introduction
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
01
Part I. Structure and processing
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.04sec
Section header
4
01
Section 1. Theoretical approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.05gra
19
34
16
Chapter
5
01
1. Psychological and computational research on theme comprehension
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
01
2. Situation models and themes
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
01
3. Conditions of updating during reading
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
01
Section 2. Experimental and corpus linguistic approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.09she
77
90
14
Chapter
9
01
4. Evaluation devices as a coordinating mechanism for story points
1
A01
Yeshayahu Shen
Shen, Yeshayahu
Yeshayahu
Shen
Tel Aviv University
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.10emm
91
117
27
Chapter
10
01
5. Responding to style
Cohesion, foregrounding and thematic interpretation
1
A01
Catherine Emmott
Emmott, Catherine
Catherine
Emmott
University of Glasgow
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.11ger
119
136
18
Chapter
11
01
6. The definite article <i>the</i> as a cue to map thematic information
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
01
7. Thematic management in Korean
1
A01
Myung-Hee Kim
Kim, Myung-Hee
Myung-Hee
Kim
Hanyang University, Korea
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.13sec
Section header
13
01
Section 3. Computational approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.14kin
157
170
14
Chapter
14
01
8. On the notions of theme and topic in psychological process models of text comprehension
1
A01
Walter Kintsch
Kintsch, Walter
Walter
Kintsch
University of Colorado
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.15le
171
187
17
Chapter
15
01
9. Themes and hierarchical structure of written texts
1
A01
Élisabeth Le
Le, Élisabeth
Élisabeth
Le
University of Alberta
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.16lou
189
212
24
Chapter
16
01
10. Computational retrieval of themes
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
01
Part II. Contents and contexts
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.18sec
Section header
18
01
Section 1. Theoretical approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.19sol
217
235
19
Chapter
19
01
11. Thematics today
1
A01
Werner Sollors
Sollors, Werner
Werner
Sollors
Harvard University
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.20pet
237
252
16
Chapter
20
01
12. Seven trends in recent thematics and a case study
1
A01
Bo Pettersson
Pettersson, Bo
Bo
Pettersson
University of Helsinki
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.21pee
253
263
11
Chapter
21
01
13. Where do literary themes come from?
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
01
14. Motives and motifs in visual thematics
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
01
Section 2. Interpretive approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.24gio
283
300
18
Chapter
24
01
15. Masking one’s themes
Irony and the politics of indirectness
1
A01
Rachel Giora
Giora, Rachel
Rachel
Giora
Tel Aviv University
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.25hjo
301
320
20
Chapter
25
01
16. Themes of nation
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
01
17. Tracking a theme
War in contemporary German literature
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
01
18. Why themes matter
Literary knowledge and the thematic example of money
1
A01
Phillipp Wolf
Wolf, Phillipp
Phillipp
Wolf
University of Gießen
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.28sec
Section header
28
01
Section 3. Computational approaches
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.29hog
353
376
24
Chapter
29
01
19. Moving targets
The making and molding of a theme
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
01
20. Quantitative hermeneutics
Inferring the meaning of narratives from trends in their content
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
01
21. Prototype effect vs. rarity effect in literary style
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
01
22. Parsing for the <i>theme</i>
A computer based approach
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
01
Name index
10
01
JB code
celcr.3.34sub
443
448
6
Miscellaneous
34
01
Subject index
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
01
Thematics
Interdisciplinary Studies
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 ‘themes’ 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
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Miscellaneous
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Preface
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Miscellaneous
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Introduction
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Max M. Louwerse
Louwerse, Max M.
Max M.
Louwerse
University of Memphis
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Willie van Peer
Peer, Willie van
Willie
van
Peer
University of Munich
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Part I. Structure and processing
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Section 1. Theoretical approaches
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1. Psychological and computational research on theme comprehension
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Arthur C. Graesser
Graesser, Arthur C.
Arthur C.
Graesser
University of Memphis
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A01
Victoria J. Pomeroy
Pomeroy, Victoria J.
Victoria J.
Pomeroy
University of Memphis
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Scotty D. Craig
Craig, Scotty D.
Scotty D.
Craig
University of Memphis
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53
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Chapter
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2. Situation models and themes
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Rolf A. Zwaan
Zwaan, Rolf A.
Rolf A.
Zwaan
Florida State University
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A01
Gabriel A. Radvansky
Radvansky, Gabriel A.
Gabriel A.
Radvansky
University of Notre Dame
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A01
Shannon Whitten
Whitten, Shannon
Shannon
Whitten
University of Memphis
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76
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3. Conditions of updating during reading
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A01
Herre van Oostendorp
Oostendorp, Herre van
Herre
van
Oostendorp
Utrecht University
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A01
José Otero
Otero, José
José
Otero
Universidad de Alcalá
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Juan Miguel Campanario
Campanario, Juan Miguel
Juan Miguel
Campanario
Universidad de Alcalá
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Section 2. Experimental and corpus linguistic approaches
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4. Evaluation devices as a coordinating mechanism for story points
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Yeshayahu Shen
Shen, Yeshayahu
Yeshayahu
Shen
Tel Aviv University
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5. Responding to style
Cohesion, foregrounding and thematic interpretation
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Catherine Emmott
Emmott, Catherine
Catherine
Emmott
University of Glasgow
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6. The definite article <i>the</i> as a cue to map thematic information
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Morton Ann Gernsbacher
Gernsbacher, Morton Ann
Morton Ann
Gernsbacher
University of Wisconsin-Madison
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Rachel Robertson
Robertson, Rachel
Rachel
Robertson
University of Wisconsin-Madison
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7. Thematic management in Korean
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Myung-Hee Kim
Kim, Myung-Hee
Myung-Hee
Kim
Hanyang University, Korea
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Section 3. Computational approaches
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8. On the notions of theme and topic in psychological process models of text comprehension
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Walter Kintsch
Kintsch, Walter
Walter
Kintsch
University of Colorado
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JB code
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Chapter
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9. Themes and hierarchical structure of written texts
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A01
Élisabeth Le
Le, Élisabeth
Élisabeth
Le
University of Alberta
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Chapter
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10. Computational retrieval of themes
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Max M. Louwerse
Louwerse, Max M.
Max M.
Louwerse
University of Memphis
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Section header
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Part II. Contents and contexts
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Section 1. Theoretical approaches
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11. Thematics today
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Werner Sollors
Sollors, Werner
Werner
Sollors
Harvard University
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12. Seven trends in recent thematics and a case study
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Bo Pettersson
Pettersson, Bo
Bo
Pettersson
University of Helsinki
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13. Where do literary themes come from?
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Willie van Peer
Peer, Willie van
Willie
van
Peer
University of Munich
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282
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14. Motives and motifs in visual thematics
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A01
Georges Roque
Roque, Georges
Georges
Roque
Centre National de la Recherche Scienti ?que,Paris
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Section 2. Interpretive approaches
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15. Masking one’s themes
Irony and the politics of indirectness
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Rachel Giora
Giora, Rachel
Rachel
Giora
Tel Aviv University
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320
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16. Themes of nation
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Mette Hjort
Hjort, Mette
Mette
Hjort
Aalborg University and the University of Hong Kong
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339
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17. Tracking a theme
War in contemporary German literature
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A01
Horst S. Daemmrich
Daemmrich, Horst S.
Horst S.
Daemmrich
University of Pennsylvania
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18. Why themes matter
Literary knowledge and the thematic example of money
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Phillipp Wolf
Wolf, Phillipp
Phillipp
Wolf
University of Gießen
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19. Moving targets
The making and molding of a theme
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A01
Robert Hogenraad
Hogenraad, Robert
Robert
Hogenraad
Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium
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395
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20. Quantitative hermeneutics
Inferring the meaning of narratives from trends in their content
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A01
Colin Martindale
Martindale, Colin
Colin
Martindale
University of Maine
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Alan N. West
West, Alan N.
Alan N.
West
Dartmouth Medical School
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405
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21. Prototype effect vs. rarity effect in literary style
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A01
Paul A. Fortier
Fortier, Paul A.
Paul A.
Fortier
University of Manitoba
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22. Parsing for the <i>theme</i>
A computer based approach
1
A01
Jan Christoph Meister
Christoph Meister, Jan
Jan
Christoph Meister
University of Hamburg
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Miscellaneous
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Name index
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Miscellaneous
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Subject index
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