Affiliation:
1. State University of New York, Albany
Abstract
Abstract
The study aims to investigate how prior experience of interlocutors interacts with actual situational context in
intercultural interactions when the latter is represented by a well-known frame: getting acquainted with others. It attempts to
demonstrate how the cultural frame of the target language is broken up and substituted with an emergent frame that is
co-constructed from elements from prior experience with the target language, the first language and the actual situational
experience.
Getting acquainted with others is a closed social situation, a cultural frame in which interlocutors usually have
to follow a behavior pattern dictated by the requirements of the socio-cultural background in a given speech community. There is a
‘skeleton’ of these ‘getting to know you’ procedures that can be considered universal but is substantiated differently in every
language. In each conversation in any language, ‘flesh’ is added to the ‘skeleton’ in a dynamic and co-constructed manner.
However, there is a difference between how this happens in L1 and in intercultural interactions. While in L1 the ‘flesh’ on the
skeleton is predetermined to a significant extent by requirements of core common ground in the given language, in intercultural
encounters this ‘flesh building’ process in the target language (in this case English) is not set but is co-constructed by the
interlocutors as emergent common ground relying on their prior experience with their own L1 culture, limited experience with the
target culture and the assessment of the actual situational context. In this study the co-construction process, i.e. emergent
common ground will be analyzed by examining the use of formulaic language and freely generated language in several discourse
segments.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,Behavioral Neuroscience,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,General Computer Science
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