Referential metadiscourse in the context of aphasia and Alzheimer’s Disease

Authors

  • Edwiges Maria Morato

Keywords:

Referential discourse, Metadiscourse, Interaction, Aphasia, Alzheimer’s Disease

Abstract

Integrated to acts of reference, metadiscourse refers to those reflexive movements made by speakers on their own statements or on others' statements during interaction. Referential metadiscourse occurs in order to signal the construction of social meaning and the way conversation is organized and managed. Two hypotheses guide this article: i) referential acts constitute an important way to give visibility to the relationship between language and cognition; observing these acts, we can understand how interactants contextualize and construct social meaning; ii) the two types of referential metadiscourse – textual and interactional (acc. Jubran, 2002, 2005) – make evident different reflexive actions performed by individuals with aphasia and Alzheimer's disease.

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Author Biography

Edwiges Maria Morato

UNICAMP – Campinas – São Paulo – Brasil

Published

2012-01-31

How to Cite

Morato, E. M. (2012). Referential metadiscourse in the context of aphasia and Alzheimer’s Disease. Letras De Hoje, 47(1), 45–54. Retrieved from https://revistaseletronicas.pucrs.br/ojs/index.php/fale/article/view/10047

Issue

Section

Language and cognition: interfaces between Linguistics, Psychology and Neuroscience