Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
933515 Journal of Pragmatics 2010 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

With a view toward developing a more inclusive understanding of indirectness in interaction, I return to Bateson's notion of abduction (a mental process by which meaning is created by analogy) and three related theoretical frameworks: Friedrich's polytropy, Becker's prior text, and Bakhtin's dialogicality—all theories of intertextuality. In order to show how these concepts help us understand the workings of indirectness in interaction I consider examples of family interaction in which one family member speaks in the voice of another, a phenomenon I call ventriloquizing. Ventriloquizing creates meaning by abduction, as speakers borrow others’ identities and thereby temporarily assign to themselves characteristics associated with those whose voices they borrow. Abduction can therefore be understood as a type of indirectness—one that is pervasive in interaction.

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Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics