Why not focus on combating the virus?On the active and passive egocentrism in communications
BaiyaoZuo
East China Normal University
Abstract
“Egocentrism” in communication usually refers to the fact that interlocutors are subconsciously influenced by
their cognitive environment. However, being egocentric may be the product of the interlocutors’ conscious choice rather than the
unavoidable impact of cognitive experience. In order to explore some emotive conflicts during the fight against COVID-19 in China,
this study distinguishes active egocentrism from passive egocentrism. We further contend that the interplay of the cognitive
environment and the active assessment of social context differ in speaker processing and hearer processing, which may result in
emotive miscommunications. The facets of the actual social context assessed by interlocutors are also investigated to explain the
formation of active egocentrism.
The COVID-19 outbreak undoubtedly created a unique social context in which public health security is prioritized more than
ever before. When the epidemic reached its peak in China in 2020, combating the virus was undoubtedly the most essential
responsibility for the entire society. In this context, when someone talked about the epidemic, both the communicator and the
addressee were supposed to keep this social responsibility in mind. However, some news reports and online comments about the fight
against COVID-19 still caused unexpected emotive reactions. What led to this? This study attempts to explain it by investigating the
different cooperation-egocentrism interplay models from both the speaker’s and the hearer’s perspectives. The formation of active
egocentrism based on the active assessment of the social situation will also be investigated.
References
Androutsopoulos, Jannis
2014 “Languaging
When Contexts Collapse: Audience Design in Social Networking.” Discourse, Context &
Media 4: 62–73.
Bednarek, Monika
2017 “Fandom”. In Pragmatics
of Social Media, ed. by Christian
R. Hoffmann, and Wolfram Bublitz, 545–572. Berlin/Boston: De
Gruyter Mouton.
Bezuidenhout, Anne
2013 “Perspective
Taking in Conversation: A Defense of Speaker Non-Egocentricity.” Journal of
Pragmatics 48: 4–16.
Bou-Franch, Patricia, and Pilar
Garcés-Conejos Blitvich
2018 “Relational
Work in Multimodal Networked Interactions on Facebook.” Internet
Pragmatics 1 (1): 134–160.
Brown, Penelope, and Stephen
C. Levinson
1987Politeness:
Some Universals in Language Usage. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Caffi, Claudia, and Richard
W. Janney
1994 “Toward
a Pragmatics of Emotive Communication.” Journal of
Pragmatics 22 (3–4): 325–373.
Chen, Xinren
2019Critical
Pragmatic Studies on Chinese Public Discourse. New
York: Routledge.
Culpeper, Jonathan
2011Impoliteness:
Using Language to Cause Offence. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Decety, Jean, and Jessica
A. Sommerville
2003 “Shared
Representations between Self and Other: A Social Cognitive Neuroscience View.” Trends in
Cognitive
Sciences 7 (12): 527–533.
de Saint
Preux, Anna
Doquin, and Ocarina
Masid Blanco
2021 “The
Power of Conceptual Metaphors in the Age of Pandemic: The Influence of the WAR and SPORT Domains on Emotions and
Thoughts.” Language &
Communication 81: 37–47.
Freidson, Eliot
1970Professional
Dominance. Chicago: Aldine.
Giora, Rachel
1997 “Understanding
Figurative and Literal Language: The Graded Salience Hypothesis.” Cognitive
Linguistics 8 (3): 183–206.
Goffman, Erving
1955 “On
Face-Work: An Analysis of Ritual Elements in Social
Interaction.” Psychiatry 18 (3): 213–231.
Goffman, Erving
1967Interaction
Ritual. Essays on Face-to-Face Behaviour. New
York: Pantheon.
Goffman, Erving
1981Forms
of Talk. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania
Press.
Gordon, David
Paul
1983 “Hospital Slang for Patients:
Crocks, Gomers, Groks, and Others.” Language in
Society 12 (2): 173–185.
Halász, Katinka
2018 “Misunderstandings
in Communicative Language Use.” Sparchtheorie and Germanistische
Linguistik 12: 237–273.
Haugh, Michael
2008 “The
Place of Intention in the Interactional Achievement of
Implicature.” In Intention, Common Ground and the Egocentric
Speaker-Hearer, eds. by Istvan Kecskes, and Jacob May, 45–86. Berlin: Mouton
de Gruyter.
Haugh, Michael
2013 “Im/Politeness,
Social Practice and the Participation Order.” Journal of
Pragmatics 58: 52–72.
Hofstede, Geert
1980 “Culture
and Organizations.” International Studies of Management &
Organization 10 (4): 15–41.
Ivaskó, Livia, and Enikő Németh
T.
2002 “Types and Reasons of
Communicative Failures.” Modern Filológiai
Közlemények 4: 31–43.
Jaworska, Sylvia
2021 “Investigating
Media Representations of the Coronavirus in the UK, USA and Germany: What Can a Comparative Corpus-Based Discourse Analysis
Contribute to Our Understanding of the Covid-19 Pandemic?” In Viral
Discourse, ed. by Rodney
H. Jones, 26–36. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Jenkins, Henry
2006Fans,
Bloggers, and Gamers: Exploring Participatory Culture. New
York: New York University Press.
Jenkins, Henry
2012Textual
Poachers: Television Fans and Participatory Culture. New
York: Routledge.
Jenkins, Henry, Mizuko Ito, and danah boyd
2016Participatory
Culture in a Networked Era. Cambridge: Polity
Press.
Kecskes, Istvan
2008 “Dueling
Context: A Dynamic Model of Meaning.” Journal of
Pragmatics 40 (3): 385–406.
Kecskes, Istvan
2012 “Is
There Anyone Out There Who Really Is Interested in the Speaker?” Language and
Dialogue 2 (2): 283–297.
Kecskes, Istvan
2019 “The
Interplay of Prior Experience and Actual Situational Context in Intercultural First
Encounters.” Pragmatics and
Cognition 26 (1): 112–134.
Kecskes, Istvan, and Fenghui Zhang
2009 “Activating,
Seeking, and Creating Common Ground: A Socio-Cognitive Approach.” Pragmatics and
Cognition 17 (2): 331–355.
Keysar, Boaz
2007 “Communication
and Miscommunication: The Role of Egocentric Processes.” Intercultural
Pragmatics 4 (1): 71–84.
Langlotz, Andreas, and Miriam
A. Locher
2012 “Ways
of Communicating Emotional Stance in Online Disagreements.” Journal of
Pragmatics 44 (12): 1591–1606.
Langlotz, Andreas, and Miriam
A. Locher
2013 “The
Role of Emotions in Relational Work.” Journal of
Pragmatics 58: 87–107.
Locher, Miriam.
A., and Richard
J. Watts
2005 “Politeness
Theory and Relational Work.” Journal of Politeness
Research 1 (1): 9–33.
Locher, Miriam.
A., and Richard
J. Watts
2008 “Relational
Work and Impoliteness: Negociating Norms of Linguistic
Behavior.” In Impolinetess in Language. Studies on Its
Interplay with Power in Theory and Practice, eds. by Derek Bousfield, and Miriam
A. Locher, 77–99. Berlin: Mouton
de Gruyter.
Lukes, Steven
1978 “Power
and Authority.” In A History of Sociological
Analysis, ed. by Thomas
B. Bottomore, and Robert
A. Nisbet, 633–676. London: Heinemann.
Lupton, Deborah
1997 “Doctors
on the Medical Profession.” Sociology of Health &
Illness 19: 480–497.
Martikainen, Jari, and Inari Sakki
2021 “Boosting
Nationalism through COVID-19 Images: Multimodal Construction of the Failure of the ‘Dear Enemy’ with COVID-19 in the National
Press.” Discourse &
Communication 15 (4): 388–414.
Mercier, Hugo, and Dan Sperber
2011 “Why
Do Humans Reason? Arguments for an Argumentative Theory.” Behavioral and Brain
Sciences 34 (2): 57–74.
2009 “Pragmatics,
Propositional and Non-Propositional Effects: Can a Theory of Utterance Interpretation Account for Emotions in Verbal
Communication?” Social Science
Information 48 (3): 447–464.
Mustajoki, Arto
2012 “A
Speaker-Oriented Multidimensional Approach to Risks and Causes of Miscommunication.” Language
and
Dialogue 2 (2): 216–243.
Németh
T., Enikő
2015 “The
Role of Perspectives in Various Forms of Language
Use.” Semiotica 203: 53–78.
Oyserman, Daphna, Heather
M. Coon, and Markus Kemmelmeier
2002 “Rethinking
Individualism and Collectivism: Evaluation of Theoretical Assumptions and
Meta-Analysis.” Psychological
Bulletin 128 (1): 3–72.
Padilla
Cruz, Manuel
2017 “Interlocutors-Related
and Hearer-Specific Causes of Misunderstanding: Processing Strategy, Confirmation Bias and Weak
Vigilance.” Research in
Language 15 (1): 11–36.
Piantadosi, Steven
T., Harry Tily, and Edward Gibson
2011 “Word
Lengths Are Optimized for Efficient Communication.” Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences 108 (9): 3526–3529.
Jones, Rodney
H.
2021 “Order out of Chaos: Coronavirus
Communication and the Construction of Competence.” In Viral
Discourse, ed. by Rodney
H. Jones, 69–78. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Ruusuvuori, Johanna
2000Control
in the Medical Consultation: Practices of Giving and Receiving the Reason for the Visit in Primary Health
Care. Tampere: Tampere University
Press.
Schröder, Ulrike
2018 “Face
as an Interactional Construct in the Context of Connectedness and Separateness: An Empirical Approach to Culture-Specific
Interpretations of
Face.” Pragmatics 28 (4): 547–572.
Shintel, Hadas, and Boaz Keysar
2009 “Less
is More: A Minimalist Account of Joint Action in Communication.” Topics in Cognitive
Science 1 (2): 260–273.
Shuvalov, Denis, and Enikő Németh
T.
2023 “Perspective-Taking in
Argumentative Discourse.” Kazan Linguistic
Journal 6 (3): 431–441.
Sperber, Dan, and Deirdre Wilson
1995Relevance:
Communication and
Cognition. Oxford: Blackwell.
Spencer-Oatey, Helen
2005 “(Im)politeness,
Face and Perceptions of Rapport: Unpackaging Their Bases and Interrelationships.” Journal of
Politeness
Research 1 (1): 95–119.
Spencer-Oatey, Helen
2008 “Face,
(Im)politeness and Rapport.” In Culturally Speaking: Culture,
Communication and Politeness Theory, ed. by Helen Spencer-Oatey, 11–47. London: Continuum.
Spencer-Oatey, Helen, and Peter Franklin
2009Intercultural
interaction: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Intercultural
Communication. Berlin: Springer.
Spencer-Oatey, Helen
2011 “Conceptualising
‘the Relational’ in Pragmatics: Insights from Metapragmatic Emotion And (Im)Politeness
Comments.” Journal of
Pragmatics 43: 3565–3578.
Starr, Rebecca
Lurie, Christian Go, and Vincent Pak
2022 “Keep
Calm, Stay Safe, and Drink Bubble Tea: Commodifying the Crisis of COVID-19 in Singapore
Advertising.” Language in
Society: 1–27.
Stevanovic, Melisa, and Anssi Peräkylä
2014 “Three
Orders in the Organization of Human Action: On the Interface between Knowledge, Power, and Emotion in Interaction and Social
Relations.” Language in
Society 43 (2): 185–207.
Thomas, Jenny.
A.
1995Meaning in Interaction. An Introduction
to
Pragmatics. London: Longman.
Yu, Hangyan, Lu Huiling, and Jie Hu
2021 “A
Corpus-Based Critical Discourse Analysis of News Reports on the Covid-19 Pandemic in China and the
UK.” International Journal of English
Linguistics 11 (2): 36.
Yus, Francisco
2018 “The
Interface between Pragmatics and Internet-Mediated
Communication.” In Pragmatics and Its
Interfaces, ed. by Cornelia Ilie, and Neal
R. Norrick, 267–290. Amsterdam: John
Benjamins.
Wilson, Deirdre, and Dan Sperber
2004 “Relevance
Theory.” In Handbook of Pragmatics, ed.
by Laurence
R. Horn, and Gregory
L. Ward, 607–632. Oxford: Blackwell.
Zuo, Baiyao
2018 “Emotive
Misunderstanding within an Extended Relevance Theory.” Intercultural
Pragmatics 15 (5): 627–650.