Article In:
Pragmatics: Online-First ArticlesFlattery in historical China
A pragmatic perspective
In this study we examine how flattery was realised in historical Chinese interactions. We bring together ritual,
speech acts and interaction, studying a corpus of interactions drawn from the late imperial satirical novel Guanchang
Xianxing Ji 官场现形记 (‘Officialdom Unmasked’). Many claims have been made about the prevalence of flattery in Chinese
social interaction, in particular in historical China. Since little language-anchored research has been dedicated to flattery in
historical Chinese, this study fills a knowledge gap. We conducted a tripartite analysis focusing on: (1) how flattery in
historical Chinese can be defined, (2) how flattery was conventionally realised, and (3) how flattery was conventionally responded
to. We also investigated how flattery relates to the phenomena of self-denigration/other-elevation and complimenting in
Chinese.
Keywords: flattery, historical Chinese, interaction ritual, speech acts, interaction
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Review of literature
- 3.Methodology and data
- 3.1Methodology
- 3.2Data
- 4.Analysis
- 4.1Defining flattery in historical Chinese
- 4.2Realisation patterns of flattery
- 4.2.1Flattery as an Initiating move 1: Unidirectionally Initiated flattery
- 4.2.2Flattery as an Initiating move 2: Bidirectionally Initiated flattery
- 4.2.3Flattery as a Satisfying move (elicited flattery) 1: Presenting/Requesting confirmation of the flatterable
- 4.2.4Flattery as a Satisfying move (elicited flattery) 2: Ostensible modesty triggering flattery
- 4.2.5Image building through a quasi-moral dilemma triggering flattering
- 4.3Responses to flattery
- 5.Discussion and conclusion
- Notes
- Author queries
-
References
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