Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://open.uns.ac.rs/handle/123456789/12372
Title: Patterns of dispreferred verbal disagreement in dialogues from American and Serbian films
Authors: Panić Kavgić, Olga 
Issue Date: 1-Dec-2013
Journal: Jezikoslovlje
Abstract: Starting from the definition of verbal disagreement as a dispreferred second turn in a conversation, this paper aims at establishing the predominant patterns of such comments and answers found in a selection of dialogues from three American and three Serbian films. The dialogues were extracted from the scripts of the US films Crash (Paul Haggis, 2004), Noel (Chazz Palminteri, 2004) and Playing by Heart (Willard Carroll, 1998), as well as of the Serbian titles Žena sa slomljenim nosem (Srd{stroke}an Koljević, 2010), Ljubav i drugi zločini (Stefan Arsenijević, 2008) and Bure baruta (Goran Paskaljević, 1998). Characterized by the interlocutor's action-environment restriction and an inherent involvement of conflict and clash of interests, a verbal oppositional stance may take the form of a straightforward disagreement or it may be mitigated, so as to avoid or soften the effects of a more direct disagreeing comment. When it comes to mitigation, various downtoning strategies are applied in order to weaken the force of a dispreferred assessment. This leads to a broad division of disagreements into mitigated and unmitigated ones, whose distribution in the six films will be described and analysed in this paper. The scripts of the three American and three Serbian films lend themselves well to comparison of the kind, since the plots have many features in common (turn-ofthe millennium urban setting, interwoven stories and characters with deep social and psychological traumas burdening their lives). By means of describing and exemplifying certain patterns of verbal disagreement in the comparable contexts of the chosen films, applying the method of qualitative analysis, the paper aims at comparing and contrasting various aspects of the phenomenon at the more general levels of the two languages (English and Serbian) and their two cultures (American and Serbian).
URI: https://open.uns.ac.rs/handle/123456789/12372
ISSN: 13317202
Appears in Collections:FF Publikacije/Publications

Show full item record

Page view(s)

24
Last Week
6
Last month
0
checked on May 10, 2024

Google ScholarTM

Check


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.