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Editors
Wolfram Bublitz
Andreas H. Jucker
Klaus P. Schneider
Volume 6
De Gruyter Mouton
Interpersonal Pragmatics
Edited by
Miriam A. Locher
Sage L. Graham
De Gruyter Mouton
ISBN 978-3-11-021432-1
e-ISBN 978-3-11-021433-8
orientation to the user of these handbooks. The series specifically pursues the fol-
lowing aims:
The nine volumes are arranged according to the following principles. The first
three volumes are dedicated to the foundations of pragmatics with a focus on micro
and macro units: Foundations must be at the beginning (volume 1), followed by
the core concepts in pragmatics, speech actions (micro level in volume 2) and dis-
course (macro level in volume 3). The following three volumes provide cognitive
(volume 4), societal (volume 5) and interactional (volume 6) perspectives. The
remaining three volumes discuss variability from a cultural and contrastive (vol-
ume 7), a diachronic (volume 8) and a medial perspective (volume 9):
1. Foundations of pragmatics
Wolfram Bublitz and Neal Norrick
2. Pragmatics of speech actions
Marina Sbisà and Ken Turner
3. Pragmatics of discourse
Klaus P. Schneider and Anne Barron
4. Cognitive pragmatics
Hans-Jörg Schmid and Dirk Geeraerts
5. Pragmatics of society
Gisle Andersen and Karin Aijmer
Preface to the handbook series vii
6. Interpersonal pragmatics
Miriam A. Locher and Sage L. Graham
7. Pragmatics across languages and cultures
Anna Trosborg
8. Historical pragmatics
Andreas H. Jucker and Irma Taavitsainen
9. Pragmatics of computer-mediated communication
Susan Herring, Dieter Stein and Tuija Virtanen
Acknowledgements
6. Relating
Robert B. Arundale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137
7. Social cognition
Andreas Langlotz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
10. Mitigation
Stefan Schneider . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 253
12. Swearing
Karyn Stapleton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 289
13. Humour
Stephanie Schnurr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 307
This collection of papers within the Handbook of Pragmatics series deals with the
interpersonal or relational1 side of language in use in that it explores in what ways
social actors use language to shape and form relationships in situ. Before we out-
line this particular focus in more detail, we wish to position this approach within
the field of pragmatics as such. Pragmatics, as a discipline, has a long and complex
history, with what some would call an “identity problem” from its earliest concep-
tion to the present day. Crystal (1997: 120) says that pragmatics is “not as yet a co-
herent field of study,” and, although he made this observation over ten years ago at
the time of this writing, it can be argued that pragmatics is still just as diverse as it
was then. Verschueren (2009: 9) says that “pragmatics sometimes looks like a re-
pository of extremely interesting but separable topics such as deixis, implicature,
presupposition, speech acts, conversation, politeness, and relevance.” Many, in
fact, associate the field of pragmatics with Speech Act Theory (Austin 1962; Searle
1969). Others (e.g., Schiffrin 1994) link pragmatics most strongly to Grice’s
(1975) cooperative principle. The label ‘pragmatics’ has also been assigned, how-
ever, to a much broader array of research. Cummings (2005: 1) observes that
“pragmatics is significantly informed by a range of academic disciplines” and al-
though this breadth has been viewed as problematic by some (e.g., Blakemore
1992; Davis 1991) others advocate a broader approach. Verschueren (2009), for
example, interprets pragmatics as
[A] general functional perspective on (any aspect of) language, i.e. as an approach to
language which takes into account the full complexity of its cognitive, social, and cul-
tural (i.e. meaningful) functioning in the lives of human beings. (Verschueren 2009: 19,
italics removed)
The strength of this definition, we believe, is that it allows us to examine the com-
plexity of language use from a rich array of perspectives, and, consistent with this,
our goal here is to take advantage of the multi-faceted nature of pragmatics. We
thus use a definition of pragmatics in the European tradition, i.e., a view that in-
cludes the study of language in use from a social and cultural point of view, rather
than a definition of pragmatics in the more narrow sense (Taavitsainen and Jucker,
2010; Jucker 2008).
Having said this, the term ‘interpersonal pragmatics’, which features in the title
of this volume, is not to be understood as a term for a theory in competition with
theoretical approaches to the study of language in use such as interactional sociol-
2 Miriam A. Locher and Sage L. Graham
What we witness here is that one and the same person is being addressed with dif-
ferent terms and adjusts her lexical choices herself when saying hello and goodbye
to her conversational partners depending on the role she and her addressees take on
in the contexts at hand (business partners, employer/secretary, employer/caretaker,
mother/son, wife/husband, friends, strangers). The choice of lexemes on both sides
is influenced by factors such as power, distance and closeness, and affect between
her and the addressees as well as the expectations about appropriate conduct linked
to roles in particular situations. The speech acts of saying hello and saying goodbye
thus receive different instantiations depending on the factors mentioned. We could
Introduction to interpersonal pragmatics 3
argue that the informational content remains the same in all cases, i.e., the speakers
wish to initiate their conversations or terminate their dealings with each other for
the time being and express this by a conventionally recognized sequence of ex-
changes, that, in Searle’s (1969: 65) words, count “as a courteous indication of rec-
ognition of the hearer”. At the same time, the ways in which the interactants
achieve this exchange tells us something about how the conversational partners
position themselves vis-à-vis each other. They thus index relationships by means
of their use of language: “Linguistic variation can provide social information”
(Holmes 1992: 4).
The above example and brief explanation will be familiar to many readers; it
clearly illustrates the importance of language in the creation of relationships and
how those relationships affect language use in turn. Many strands of research have
investigated these interpersonal effects and some of these strands of research are
listed below. For example, Watzlawick, Beavin and Jackson (1967: 54) maintain
that “[e]very communication has a content and a relationship aspect such that the
latter classifies the former and is therefore a metacommunication.” Furthermore,
the content and relational aspects of language are impossible to separate entirely
(Fill 1990). There are certain practices that primarily focus on “optimally efficient
transmission of information” (Brown and Yule 1983; Lakoff 1989), i.e., what
Kasper (1990: 205) terms transactional discourse, and there are other practices
that have as their “primary goal the establishment and maintenance of social rela-
tionships”, and constitute interactional discourse (Kasper 1990: 205). We never-
theless cannot entirely separate the content from the relational aspect in these in-
stances. In the above example, we can see that the exchanges between the business
partners (goodbye Margaret/goodbye Mike), secretary and employer (goodbye Ms
Walker/goodbye Jill) and caretaker and employer (bye Mrs Walker/goodbye Andy)
achieve the act of leave-taking and also shape relationships between the partici-
pants by foregrounding the hierarchical relationships through the use of more for-
mal/less formal address terms.
With respect to Example (1) it is important to point out that relational aspects in
language use are not only conveyed in the use of lexical alternatives, but may also
manifest themselves in syntactic and phonological choices. Interactants may signal
(consciously or subconsciously) that they belong to a certain social class or group
by their use of language. For example, non-standard syntactic patterns in the case
of dialects may index social and regional belonging. Research in sociolinguistics2
has further established that the use of language is influenced by a variety of factors
such as age, gender, ethnicity or socio-economic background. Ultimately, such lan-
guage use creates in-groups and out-groups and as such shapes relations between
people. As a result, the combination of these choices add to a person’s linguistic
identity construction and thus combine to position a person vis-à-vis others.
The latter point highlights that the relational aspect of language is closely
linked to how people shape their identities. Seminal work on linguistic identity
4 Miriam A. Locher and Sage L. Graham
this volume seems almost a given since many readers may first think of politeness
theory when considering interpersonal or relational issues in language. Four
chapters are dedicated to this research strand. Brown and Levinson’s (1978, 1987)
seminal study exemplifies the attempts of the researchers to include the situation
and the interactants’ relations in the study of how im/politeness is negotiated. They
have given currency to the metaphor of ‘face’ and so-called ‘face-threatening acts’.
In their framework, face is “the public self-image that every member wants to
claim for himself [sic.]” (Brown and Levinson 1987: 61), while face-threatening
acts are “acts that by their nature run contrary to the face wants of the addressee
and/or of the speaker” (Brown and Levinson 1987: 65). The researchers then dem-
onstrate how people systematically redress or avoid face-threatening acts, a pro-
cess which they equate with politeness. Their study is influential to the present day
and can easily be argued to be the starting point for most research in the field of
politeness since its publication. This is even true for work that takes a distinctly
different point of view since work in this field cannot but make reference to this
seminal study. For this reason, Chapter 2 by Maria Sifianou, entitled ‘Linguistic
politeness: Laying the foundations’, re-examines this classic work by appraising
its advantages and drawbacks, looking back over three decades of research. She
also includes a discussion of other early work, such as Lakoff’s (1973) Rules of
Politeness or Leech’s (1983) Politeness Principle.
Chapter 3 by Richard J. Watts, ‘Linguistic politeness theory and its aftermath:
Recent research trails’, then takes up and explores the developments in politeness
research since these early approaches. There are two issues that appear to be most
noteworthy. On the one hand, there is a current debate to what extent researchers
should take a first order (interactant-informed/emic) or a second order (theoretical/
etic) approach to studying politeness (cf., e.g., Locher and Bousfield 2008; Bous-
field, this volume). This debate on methodology is important since it has again
brought movement into this field of research. On the other hand, both first and sec-
ond order researchers have started to broaden the field of study in that politeness is
no longer the only object of study. For example, the term ‘relational work’, as used
by Locher and Watts (2008: 96), “refers to all aspects of the work invested by in-
dividuals in the construction, maintenance, reproduction and transformation of in-
terpersonal relationships among those engaged in social practice.” Studies in re-
cent years thus focus no longer predominantly on mitigating facework, but on
face-enhancing, face-maintaining, as well as face-aggravating/damaging behavior.
Some of the reactions to the vast numbers of politeness studies inspired by the
early approaches to politeness research called forth reactions from researchers who
investigated non-Western, and especially Asian languages (e.g., Matsumoto 1988;
Mao 1994). Early on, there was criticism of the notion of face because it was ar-
gued to be conceptualized as an Anglo-Western, individualistic concept, at the ex-
clusion of cultures that would favor a more group-oriented and less individualistic
understanding of face. As a result, research on Asian languages furthered our
6 Miriam A. Locher and Sage L. Graham
While Part II focuses on specific linguistic strategies and draws on several dis-
course contexts to explain them, Part III gives central stage to particular contexts
and then looks at the (potentially many) linguistic strategies employed for creat-
ing relational effects in these discursive practices. The contexts and discourses
chosen to be discussed are the workplace, health discourse, legal discourse,
political discourse, and the discourse of dating ads. Although this list provides
only a snapshot of possible topics, each of these areas has received a great deal of
attention as contexts in which interpersonal negotiations of power and solidarity
can have a tremendous impact, not just on expectations about appropriateness on
an interpersonal level, but also within larger social structures. In each of the
chapters, the focus is on the interpersonal issues that emerge as shaping the
discursive practices (e.g., power, solidarity, delicateness of topics, interactional
roles, etc.). The chapters include reviews of the field as well as reports on empiri-
cal research.
Chapter 14 by Bernadette Vine examines ‘Interpersonal issues in the work-
place’. Using the notions of power and solidarity as a foundation, she explores
strategies (small talk, narrative, and humor) employed by individuals engaging in
‘social talk’ in the workplace to negotiate their identities and relationships within
their workplace roles. She also explores the interpersonal functions of turn-taking,
face threatening acts, and interpersonal markers in workplace transactional talk.
By engaging in an examination of both the social aspect of workplace interaction
as well as the transactional component, Vine gives us a more comprehensive view
of the connections between interpersonal communication strategies and power as
they relate to the negotiation of workplace identities and interpersonal relation-
ships.
In Janet Cotterill’s chapter on ‘Interpersonal issues in court’, the author notes
that previous research on forensic linguistics has focused on turn-taking and the
pre-ordained and prescriptive rules that govern interaction in the courtroom, but
has not explicitly addressed the relationships between the participants from the
Introduction to interpersonal pragmatics 9
perspective of power. Drawing on the tenets of Gricean pragmatics and the coop-
erative principle, she explores the fundamental rules of courtroom behavior and
examines the strategies and practices of witnesses who appear to rebel against
these “interactional rules”. She goes on to explore the relational strategies that wit-
nesses employ and what consequences might exist for the witnesses who resist and
rebel against the (sometimes unspoken) dictums of what is considered appropriate
language use in this context.
Boyd Davis provides a close examination of ‘Interpersonal issues in health dis-
course’ in Chapter 16. Her examination not only explores the ramification of com-
municative practices and assumptions for speakers with Alzheimer’s, it also poses
a key question in the development of health discourse research (namely how to best
connect the wide array of researchers who are studying interactional and interper-
sonal issues in medical encounters). Researchers in this area run the gamut from
linguists to medical doctors interested in communicating more effectively with
their patients (although not all of them focus on the interpersonal/relational com-
ponent of medical interactions). This is important for two reasons: (1) each of the
groups that Davis identifies has different research goals (and therefore hopes for
different outcomes and applications for the research that they do), and (2) because
there is little dialogue between the various disciplines, the application of research
findings may be limited. In other words, if researchers are not aware of findings
from other disciplines, they cannot take advantage of this (potentially) rich re-
source. Research findings uncovered by medical doctors, for example, may never
reach the linguistics community (and vice versa) because the journals where re-
sults are published are rarely read by researchers from other disciplines/other per-
spectives. This shortcoming has striking implications for treatment, and Davis uses
examples from Alzheimer’s talk to illustrate this.
As with the other contexts discussed so far, political discourse is another area
where the rules for interaction are intricately intertwined with power relations. In
José Luis Blas Arroyo’s chapter on ‘Interpersonal issues in political discourse’, the
author examines the ways that conflict management and the enactment of power
and authority are used by candidates in navigating the complex relationships they
have with their audiences. As Blas Arroyo notes, political discourse is particularly
complicated with regard to interpersonal relationships because of the multi-layered
and overlapping web of audiences. Politicians must manage their adversarial rela-
tionships with other candidates, attend to their communication with the voters
(who may be the ultimate audience for any politician’s talk), and strategically in-
teract with the media (and its ability to craft a persona for the candidate who might
or might not be appealing to its own (the media’s) audience or the politician’s en-
visioned audience (voters)).
Finally, Carol Marley’s chapter puts issues in the discourse of dating ads ‘under
the microscope’. In fact, dating ads can be argued to be an ideal forum to investi-
gate the connection of language and identity construction, since the ads function as
10 Miriam A. Locher and Sage L. Graham
the first means of contact between interactants who want to start a relationship. In
other words, while all interactions have an interpersonal side, it is the aim of this
genre to make possible further interpersonal contact in the first place. The strat-
egies used to create an individual’s identity, i.e., how they position themselves
within the expectations of the genre of dating ads, are thus critical to the interper-
sonal relationships that the participants are trying to create. This study therefore
examines the interpersonal strategies that dating ad writers use to craft identities as
physically and emotionally appealing to their (envisioned) audience.
5. Concluding remarks
Notes
1. The terms relational and interpersonal are used as synonyms in this chapter.
2. Coulmas (2005: 10) argues that “[t]he central theme of sociolinguistics is variety. To the
observer, language presents itself as a seemingly infinite variety of forms, but this variety
is patterned. That is, there are restrictions on choices between coexisting varieties.”
Introduction to interpersonal pragmatics 11
Wardhaugh (2002: 5) tells us that “[a] recognition of [this] variation implies that we must
recognize that a language is not just some kind of abstract object of study. It is also some-
thing that people use.” For our purposes, it is important to point out that the relational as-
pect of language plays an important role in the search for the cause of the observed vari-
ation.
3. Brown and Levinson (1978, 1987) argue in their theory of politeness that people estimate
the degree of a face-threatening act by taking into account the variables of power, dis-
tance and the relative ranking of an imposition in a particular situation and adjust their
linguistic behaviour accordingly. Their framework is discussed in detail in Chapter 2 by
Maria Sifianou and Chapter 3 by Richard J. Watts.
4. As mentioned before, next to gender, age, ethnicity, and class are considered further im-
portant factors in identity construction (cf. De Fina and Mullany, both this volume).
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Blakemore, Diane
1992 Understanding Utterances. Oxford: Blackwell.
Bousfield, Derek and Miriam A. Locher (eds.)
2008 Impoliteness in Language. Studies on its Interplay with Power in Theory and
Practice. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Brown, Penelope and Stephen C. Levinson
1978 Universals in language usage: Politeness phenomena. In: Esther N. Goody
(ed.), Questions and Politeness, 56–289. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Brown, Penelope and Stephen C. Levinson
1987 Politeness. Some Universals in Language Usage. Cambridge: Cambridge Uni-
versity Press.
Brown, Gillian and George Yule
1983 Discourse Analysis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Bucholtz, Mary and Kira Hall
2005 Identity and interaction: A sociocultural linguistic approach. Discourse
Studies 7(4–5): 585–614.
Coulmas, Florian
2005 Sociolinguistics: The Study of Speakers’ Choices. Cambridge: Cambridge Uni-
versity Press.
Crystal, David
1997 The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language. 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Cummings, Louise
2005 Pragmatics: A Multidisciplinary Perspective. New York: Routledge.
Davies, Bronwyn and Rom Harré
1990 Positioning: The social construction of self. Journal for the Theory of Social
Behavior 20(1): 43–63.
12 Miriam A. Locher and Sage L. Graham
Davis, Steven
1991 Pragmatics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
De Fina, Anna
2003 Identity in Narrative. A Study of Immigrant Discourse. Amsterdam: John Ben-
jamins.
Fill, Alwin
1990 Scherz und Streit aus ethnolinguistischer Sicht. Papiere zur Linguistik 2(43):
117–125.
Grice, Herbert Paul
1975 Logic and Conversation. In: Peter Cole and Jerry L. Morgan (eds.), Syntax and
Semantics. Vol. III: Speech Acts, 41–58. New York: Academic Press.
Holmes, Janet
1992 An Introduction to Sociolinguistics. London: Longman.
Jucker, Andreas H.
2008 Historical pragmatics. Language and Linguistics Compass 2(5): 894–906.
Kasper, Gabriele
1990 Linguistic politeness: Current research issues. Journal of Pragmatics 14(2):
193–218.
Lakoff, Robin
1973 The logic of politeness; or, minding your p’s and q’s. Papers from the Ninth Re-
gional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society, 292–305. Chicago: Chicago
Linguistic Society.
Lakoff, Robin Tolmach
1989 The limits of politeness: Therapeutic and courtroom discourse. Multilingua 8:
101–129.
Leech, Geoffrey N.
1983 Principles of Pragmatics. London: Longman.
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2008 Introduction: Impoliteness and power in language. In: Derek Bousfield and
Miriam A. Locher (eds.), Impoliteness in Language. Studies on its Interplay
with Power in Theory and Practice, 1–13. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Locher, Miriam A. and Richard J. Watts
2008 Relational work and impoliteness: Negotiating norms of linguistic behaviour.
In: Derek Bousfield and Miriam A. Locher (eds.), Impoliteness in Language.
Studies on its Interplay with Power in Theory and Practice, 77–99. Berlin:
Mouton de Gruyter.
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1994 Beyond politeness theory: ‘Face’ revisited and renewed. Journal of Prag-
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Introduction to interpersonal pragmatics 13
Abstract
Brown and Levinson’s ([1978] 1987) theory has undoubtedly been the most in-
fluential treatment of politeness phenomena. Along with Lakoff (1973) and Leech
(1983), Brown and Levinson have contributed to the immense expansion of related
research both within and outside linguistics. Ensuing publications both supported
but also contested several of the tenets of these earlier theories, with more recent
ones attempting to provide alternative frameworks that focus on politeness as a
discursive social phenomenon.
In this chapter, I shall concentrate on the above early approaches to politeness
and sketch their major tenets, their sources and common assumptions as well as
their distinctive aspects. I shall consider criticisms expressed, especially in re-
lation to Brown and Levinson’s theory, a substantial body of which relates to its
claims of universal applicability and its treatment of the concept of ‘face’. Finally,
I shall highlight the impact of these theories on current developments. These are
explored in more detail by Richard J. Watts in Chapter 3 of the present volume.
1. Introduction
Brown and Levinson’s ([1978] 1987) theory of politeness along with those of La-
koff (1973) and Leech (1983) established the foundations and induced a tremen-
dous expansion of research on politeness phenomena both within and outside lin-
guistics. Thus writing on the issue of politeness and, in particular, appraising the
contribution of its forerunners is a difficult task for various reasons, not least be-
cause it feels like committing a sacrilege. Furthermore, since so much has been
written on these approaches, one feels that there is nothing more to be said without
sounding trite. Yet, no project on interpersonal interaction can be complete without
an appraisal of this extremely influential early work.
The stage for the study of linguistic politeness was set by Lakoff’s (1973) pion-
eering work, followed by the contributions made by Brown and Levinson ([1978]
1987) as well as by Leech (1983). Presumably, without this early work, we would
18 Maria Sifianou
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