What Is Discourse Analysis - 1st Group-1
What Is Discourse Analysis - 1st Group-1
What Is Discourse Analysis - 1st Group-1
Analysis?
1st Group
1. Abimanyu Hanif Nashiruddin (216121044)
2. Nourma Indria Utami (216121144)
3. Lutfi Nur Azizah (216121153)
4. Tutik Murni Utami (216121163)
Table of contents
01 02 03
What is Discourse A Brief Historical Discourse vs Text
Analysis Overview
04 05 06
Language in and Context Spoken vs Written
out of Context Language
01
What is Discourse
Analysis
What is Discourse Analysis
Discourse analysis is a rapidly growing and evolving field.
Current research in this field now flows from numerous academic disciplines that
are very different from one another.
Included are the disciplines in which models for understanding and methods for
analyzing, discourse first developed, such as linguistics, anthropology, and
philosophy.
But also included are disciplines that have applied – and thus often extended –
such models and methods to problems within their own academic domains, such
as communication, cognitive psychology, social psychology, and artificial
intelligence.
A Brief
02 Historical
Overview
British discourse analysis was greatly
influenced by
1. M. A. K. Halliday's functional approach 2. Sinclair and Coulthard(1975) at the University of
to language(e.g. Halliday 1973), which Birmingham, who developed a model for the
connects with the Prague School of description of teacher-pupil talk based on a
linguists. Halliday's frame work hierarchy of discourse units. Discourse analysis
emphasizes the social functions of has grown into a wide-ranging and
language and the thematic and heterogeneous discipline which finds its unity in
informational structure of speech and the description of the language above the
writing. sentence and an interest in the contexts and
cultural influences which affect language in use.
03
Discourse
vs Text
There has been some confusion in the literature regarding the distinction
between “discourse analysis” and “text analysis”.
Some claim to make clears distinctions between “discourse” and “text”, but
a closer look reveals that their distinctions do not hold
Example
● Text ● Discourse
Is made up of sentences. Is the use of such sentences.
- A text is made up of sentences - A discourse is made up of utterances
having the property of having the property of coherence
grammatical cohesion. - Discourse anaylisis : investigates
- Text analysis : Deals with coherence
cohesion
● Text ● Discourse
Text is defined in terms of Discourse is viewed as a process
its being a physical product.
Meaning is derived through the
Meaning is not found in reader’s interaction with the
text text.
04
Language in and
out of Context
Language in and out of context
1. Context in language is what surrounds a word or piece of text. In order to understand
what words mean, we have to know something about the situation where they are
used. In print, a word, phrase or sentence has other text around it. This helps the
reader to understand the piece in question. It is fairly easy for native speakers to
understand, but not for ESL students. They can use photos, drawings, videos to
illustrate words and ideas so that ESL students get the gist.
2. Words are used out of context, only a small separate part of what was originally said
or written is reported, with the result that their meaning is not clear or is not
understood.
05 Context
● Context is the situation or background where
communication occurs.
● Context can be considered as the cause of a
conversation.
● It can be concluded that context is a bridge to
start communication.
Several Types of Context
Physical Context
• Includes the place where language use occurs in a communication, the objects presented
in the communication event, and the actions or behavior of the roles in the communication
event.
Epistemic Context
• Background knowledge that is known to both readers and listeners .
Linguistic Context
• Linguistic Context refers to the context of language used in everyday conversation and
refers to a common meaning.
Social Context
• Namely social relations and background settings that complement the relationship
between speakers.
Spoken vs
06 Written
Language
Spoken vs Written Language