Journal of Northeastern University(Social Science) ›› 2021, Vol. 23 ›› Issue (3): 120-126.DOI: 10.15936/j.cnki.1008-3758.2021.03.016

• Linguistics and Literature • Previous Articles    

From Form, Act to Event: Discourse Analysis as a Deconstructive Strategy

WANG Wenbo   

  1. (School of Liberal Arts, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, China)
  • Published:2021-05-21
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Abstract: The study of language in the 20th century experienced three stages—formal linguistics, behavioral linguistics and event linguistics, which respectively regard language as language signs, speech acts and discourse events. By taking language as an event, discourse linguistics highlights the uniqueness, heterogeneity and contingency of discourse events. The deconstruction practice of Michel Foucault, Barbara Herrnstein Smith, Hayden White and others relies on the exploration of heterogeneous factors behind discourse events, highlighting the potential of discourse analysis as a deconstruction strategy and path. Discourse analysis, as a method and path of deconstructive criticism, analyzes things in a complex interactive system with multiple factors and opposes dichotomy and monism. Its specific deconstruction path is the empirical path. It forms the deconstruction by exploring boundary cases that cannot be covered and commensurable by an overall framework.

Key words: formal linguistics; behavioral linguistics; event linguistics; discourse analysis; deconstruction

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