The Relationship of Verbal and Nonverbal Communication / / Mary R. Key.

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter DGBA Linguistics and Semiotics - <1990
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Place / Publishing House:Berlin ;, Boston : : De Gruyter Mouton, , [2011]
©1980
Year of Publication:2011
Edition:2nd printing 1981. Reprint 2011
Language:English
Series:Contributions to the Sociology of Language [CSL] , 25
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Physical Description:1 online resource (388 p.)
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • PART I. Language and Nonverbal Behavior as Organizers of Social Systems
  • Language and Nonverbal Behavior as Organizers of Social Systems
  • PART II. The Suprasegmentals of Interaction
  • Accents that Determine Stress
  • The Relation of Interactional Synchrony to Cognitive and Emotional Processes
  • The Rhythmic Basis of Interactional Micro- Synchrony
  • Proto-Rhythms: Nonverbal to Language and Musical Acquisition
  • A Method for Film Analysis of Ethnic Communication Style
  • Chronemics and the Verbal-Nonverbal Interface
  • The Role of Rhythm in ‘Cementing’ Meaning in Piman Songs
  • PART III. Organization of Language and Nonverbal Behavior
  • Some Notes on Analyzing Data on Face-to-Face Interaction
  • Requesting, Giving, and Taking: The Relationship Between Verbal and Nonverbal Behavior in the Speech Community of the Eipo, Irian Jaya (West New Guinea)
  • Preverbal Communication and Linguistic Evolution
  • Interruptions of Continuity and Other Features Characteristic of Spontaneous Talk
  • The Nonverbal Context of Verbal Listener Responses
  • Gesticulation and Speech: Two Aspects of the Process of Utterance
  • Things and Words
  • PART IV. Acquisition of Communicative Behavior
  • The Infant’s Communicative Competencies and the Achievement of Intersubjectivity
  • ‘Acquisition’ of Communication Competence: Is Language Enough?
  • Silence is Golden? The Changing Role of Non-Talk in Preschool Conversations
  • PART V Theoretical Approaches to Human Interaction
  • Dionysians and Apollonians
  • The Analogy of Linguistics with Chemistry
  • Why Electromagnetism Is the Only Causal ‘Spook’ Required to Explain Completely Any Human Behavior or Institution
  • Bibliography
  • Index