2008
DOI: 10.1075/bjl.22.01de
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Commitment: The term and the notions

Abstract: This volume brings together thoroughly reworked versions of a selection of papers presented at the conference The Notion of Commitment in Linguistics, held at the University of Antwerp in January 2007. It is the companion volume to a collection of essays in French to be published in Langue Française and devoted to La notion de prise en charge. Commitment is a close counterpart toprise en charge, and two contributors, Celle and Lansari, use it essentially as a translation of the French term. However, commitment… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 11 publications
(7 reference statements)
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“…In the sociolinguistic perspective, Jaffe (2009, 3) defines stancetaking as "taking up a position with respect to the form or the content of one's utterance". Beside the "affective" stance, related to the emotions expressed towards the ongoing object of discourse, the "epistemic" stance is defined as the speaker's attitude towards the reliability of conveyed information (Dendale and Tasmowski 2001); commitment to the truth of the message (De Brabanter and Dendale, 2008); its degree of certainty, i.e. likelihood of the proposition (Castelfranchi & Poggi, 1998); certainty or uncertainty of the information being communicated (Zuczkowski et al, 2017).…”
Section: Previous Work On Uncertaintymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the sociolinguistic perspective, Jaffe (2009, 3) defines stancetaking as "taking up a position with respect to the form or the content of one's utterance". Beside the "affective" stance, related to the emotions expressed towards the ongoing object of discourse, the "epistemic" stance is defined as the speaker's attitude towards the reliability of conveyed information (Dendale and Tasmowski 2001); commitment to the truth of the message (De Brabanter and Dendale, 2008); its degree of certainty, i.e. likelihood of the proposition (Castelfranchi & Poggi, 1998); certainty or uncertainty of the information being communicated (Zuczkowski et al, 2017).…”
Section: Previous Work On Uncertaintymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…He likens the function of such verbs to stage-directions, which serve to 'help the understanding and assessment of what is said rather than being a part of what is said' (p. 496). Urmson's (1952) observation has developed into the key linguistic principle of commitment, in which the speaker makes a public display of an attitude towards their utterance (De Brabanter and Dendale 2008) and which is commonly taken to be gradable (e.g. Palmer 1986;Toulmin 1958;Vanderveken 1990).…”
Section: Cognitive Verbs and Linguistic Commitmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(1) Commitment: Let us start with the notion of 'commitment:' As pointed out by De Brabanter & Dendale (2008), there are several notions of commitment on the market; with respect to speech-act taxonomy, Harnish (2005) compares the approaches by Searle (1969), Alston (2000), and Bach & Harnish (1979). Harnish (2005: 12) draws a distinction between "more or less ' Austinian' approaches, which rely on rules and/or conventions" (including Searle 1969, 1979and Alston 2000 and "more or less 'Gricean' approaches, which rely on propositional attitudes" (including Bach & Harnish 1979, albeit the latter actually are "a mixed case, " as Fn.…”
Section: Commitment Certainty Cancellabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%