Lewis Carroll: Subversive pragmaticist

Robin T. Lakoff

Quick links
A browser-friendly version of this article is not yet available. View PDF
Auden, W.D
(1971) Today’s “wonder-world” needs Alice. In Phillips, Aspects of Alice, pp. 3-12.Google Scholar
Austin, J. L
(1962) How to do things with words. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Carroll, Lewis
(1960 [1862]) Alice’s adventures in wonderland and through the looking glass. New York: Signet (New American Library).Google Scholar
Freud, Sigmund
(1917) A difficulty in the path of psycho-analysis. Standard Edition, vol. XVII. London: Hogarth Press, 137-144.Google Scholar
Gordon, David and George Lakoff
(1971) Conversational postulates. Papers from the Seventh Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society, pp. 63-84.  BoP
Lakoff, Robin
(1972) Language in context. Language 48: 907-27. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
(1990) Talking power. New York: Basic Books.  BoPGoogle Scholar
Phillips, Robert
(ed.) (1971) Aspects of Alice. New York: Vintage.Google Scholar
Sass, Louis A
(1992) Madness and modernism. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Searle, John R
(1969) Speech acts. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Searlc, John R
(1979) Expression and meaning. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Sewell, Elizabeth
(1952) The field of nonsense. London: Chatto and Windus.Google Scholar