Doing Discourse Analysis An Introduction
Doing Discourse Analysis An Introduction
D o in g D i s c o u r s e A n a ly sis:
A N IN T R O D U C T IO N
ISBN 978-602-61718-9-4
WRITER:
Murni Mahmud
PROOFREADER:
Murni Mahmud
DESIGN COVER & LAYOUT
Wirasatriaji
P H O E N IX
P U B LIS H E R
Jl. Wonosari km. 7 Kalangan RT 7
No. 197 Yogyakarta 55197
Telp. 0851-0561-0052
By
MURNI MAHMUD
i
This book is dedicated to:
ii
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
Bismillahirrahmanirrahim
In the name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful
Semoga gelar yang saya terima ini bukan hanya menjadikan nama saya
lebih panjang, tetapi lebih sebagai motivasi untuk terus berkarya
iii
I ask for forgiveness for not mentioning all the names in this book. I do
hope this book will become good resource for readings in Discourse Analysis and
in linguistic study as a whole.
Murni Mahmud
iv
CONTENTS
DEDICATION ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT iii
CONTENTS
v
4.1 Areas of Discourse Analysis 39
4.1.1 Classroom Interaction 39
4.1.2 Courtroom Interaction 40
4.1.3 Children Conversation 40
4.1.4 Mass Media and Social Media 41
4.1.5 Other Formal and Informal Settings 41
4.2 Issues in Discourse Analysis 42
4.2.1 Politeness 42
4.2.2 Speech Acts 43
4.2.3 Power Conflict 44
4.2.4 Gender-Related Issues 45
4.2.5 Non-Verbal Communication 46
4.2.6 Code-Switching 47
4.2.7 Discourse Markers 48
4.2.8 Teacher Talk 49
4.2.9 Summary 49
4.2.10 Questions for Discussion 50
Chapter 5 Methods of Discourse Analysis 51
5.1 The Ground 51
5.2 Data Collection 54
5.2.1 Types of Discourse Data 54
5.2.2 Methods of Producing Data 56
5.3 Data Analysis 60
5.3.1 Selecting Data 60
5.3.2 Transcription 61
5.3.3 Interpreting 62
5.3.4 Reporting 65
5.4 Summary 65
5.5 Questions for Discussion 66
Chapter 6 Samples of Discourse Analysis 68
6.1 Politeness 68
6.2 Conversational Implicature 78
6.3 Code-Switching 81
6.4 Speech Acts 84
6.5 Summary 86
6.7 Questions for Discussion 86
References 87
Curriculum Vitae 95
vi
AUTHOR’S PREFACE
The writing of this book is inspired by the need to provide appropriate
books in the course of Discourse Analysis. This course is an important part of
linguistic study. This course becomes the main subject studied by university
students in all levels, in undergraduate degree, in master degree, and in the
doctorate degree. In addition, Discourse Analysis, which I then wrote as DA in
this book is now a trending method in doing research, especially in qualitative
research. Researchers have been using this method in data analysis, besides the
use of quasi-experimental design.
My main intention in writing this book is to explore the theoretical
background of DA as a branch of study in linguistics. I attempt as well to examine
the methods used in doing DA and later to give exercises for students in doing DA.
This book can become a good reference for students in doing DA, as additional
sources for doing DA.
During the time I teach this course, I find some interesting cases. Students
find many copied books. They have plenty of books on DA copied from original
books. They can also read many resources about DA from the internet through
free search engines such as Google or Wikipedia. Indeed, they can download a
free e-book from the internet about DA. The problem that I think it is urgent is
that those students find difficulties to understand the theories of DA. Not only that,
several students told me that they had learned DA in their level before such as in
undergraduate program; however, they still do not understand what DA is exactly.
More problems exist when they were asked about what to do in DA. Often when
they had read so many books in DA, problems occurred when the questions came
to “how to do DA?”. What they need besides learning theories is actually
practicing to apply DA in their work, their paper, and also in their research later.
In undergraduate degree, for example, when I explained a little bit about
DA in the class of Introduction to Linguistics as a part of linguistic study, I got the
impression that the students had not got ideas about it. Especially when I
explained that DA requires higher level of thinking as it is about analysis not only
on the sentences, clauses, or phrases, but within the sentences, clauses, or phrases,
students said that the study must be very difficult.
In master degree program when I am usually given the responsibility to
teach the course, students gave a lot comments. One of them is about the
difficulties they encountered when doing DA, especially when they were given
the tasks to analyze spoken discourses. Problems cover when they had to produce
data by recording, transcribing the collected data, and later interpreting the data.
One of the students said, “let’s pray so we can pass this subject”. Another
comment, “I always got dizzy after joining the class DA”. Some students said that
they did not actually know or understand about DA. I asked them again, “what did
you do during the course?”. They said “it was just discussion about theories”. My
impression is that what they want actually is not only theories and concepts on
DA, but also on practices of doing DA.
Surprisingly, students in the post-graduate program (S3) admitted that DA
is a new thing for them. They said, “It is new for me”. When I asked whether they
vii
had learned it before, they said, “We never studied it before”. Another comment
was “I have studied it but I did not know what DA was”. When I asked their
reasons, they said that they only learned about theories, no methods or practices.
One of them stated that the lecture of DA in only by dictating the theories, and no
or less practices at all.
Because of these facts, they needed extra work to do it. One of the students
told me that in their undergraduate program and master degree, they did not obtain
enough information and skills in doing DA. When I assigned them to do tasks in
DA, they said that it would be new experiences for them. However, it was also a
challenging job.
Therefore, I got impressions that students thought that DA was a rather
difficult subject. I guess that is because it is a new thing to study or because it
requires a high level of analysis.
When I did my Ph.D at Anthropology Department at the Australian
National University, I never realized that what I did was something relating to DA.
My interest was in gender studies in relation to language use. Because I was in
anthropological department, I needed to relate it to the anthropological cases. My
background as a Bugis encouraged me to do more research on Bugis society
although many people might think studies on it were not new anymore. However,
I kept asking myself if I really knew everything about my Bugis life. In fact, at the
end of my study, I just realized that there were still many things I did not know
about my culture as Bugis.
All my supervisors were also interested in the study of Bugis. Due to my
linguistic background, I needed to study something relating to linguistic aspects of
Bugis people. I decided then to choose politeness. Although various studies had
been conducted in this area, I was certain that I would do a lot of contributions to
linguistic study as well as in historical and anthropological study through the
study of politeness.
One year of my fieldwork made me busy with recording data. I had to go
back to the university with plenty of data, spoken and written, on how Bugis
people practice their politeness. I was busy in transcribing the data, especially the
spoken data. Then when the panel supervisors asked for further activities, there
were still many things to do regarding the data. However, I was happy when I
finalized my work about linguistic politeness of Bugis people. Not only that, I
acquired the knowledge and the skills of doing DA in linguistic politeness of
Bugis people.
My impression is that DA is not actually difficult. It just needs hard
working, not because it is difficult but because it has many details to be given a
great attention. However, when ones start to do it, it will be a fantastic job. Now
most of my research is done under the scope of DA.
I hope that this book will be beneficial for students programming the
course of DA, either to master degree or doctorate degree. In writing this book, I
accumulated some theories from available books, copied and read from the
internet. I also provided examples of doing DA, either spoken or written. Some of
them were taken from the students’ thesis that had been written based on DA and
from journal articles that had been published. Some examples were also taken
viii
from my study on Politeness in Bugis, a part of my Ph.D thesis. Because my
intention is not only for doing DA in English language only, I also provide some
examples from other languages, such as Bugis language and Indonesian language.
The book was written in six chapters. In the first chapter, I provide
theories and concepts that readers need to have as a starting point in
understanding DA. The second chapter is about some important concepts and
approaches for DA. The third chapter is about the disciplines which become the
scope of study in DA. Reading this chapter will give underlying ideas about what
fields to be discussed in order to use and do DA. The fourth part is about the areas
and issues in doing DA containing the setting or areas and the issues that may be
taken as a focus in doing DA. The fifth part of the book is about the methods of
doing DA, providing the steps in doing DA and aspects related to the process of
collecting and analyzing the discourse data. The sixth chapter is examples of work
in doing DA, which are very important as a model in doing DA. Exercises and
examples of articles written in DA are also provided.
Since this is the first edition, I guess that the book is still far from being
perfect. I still do the editing process and wish to provide better product in the next
edition.
The Author,
Murni Mahmud, 26 November 2016
ix
FOREWORD
Head fo English Study Program, Graduate Program, State University fo
Makasas r
It is my privilege to introduce this book entitled “Doing Discourse
Analysis: An Introduction”, written by Murni Mahmud, Professor in English
Education Department, Faculty of Languages and Literature, State University of
Makassar. Murni Mahmud is majoring in Anthropology Linguistics. She teaches
some subjects in the area of Linguistics such as Sociolinguistics, Anthropology
Linguistics, Morphology, Syntax, and Discourse Analysis (DA).
This book is expected to provide resources in the study of DA. This
subject has become an important subject and has been chosen as a compulsory
subject in the English Study Program, the Graduate Program, State University of
Makassar. Plenty of books on DA are available, copied and obtained from e-books.
This book at least provides good examples and good procedures in doing DA.
What students need is also practices or strategies of applying DA.
Hopefully this book gives benefit in the study of DA. I expect that students
in the Graduate Program, especially in English Study Program, can choose DA as
one method in doing their research. With the increasing interest of qualitative
research, hopefully this book may give introductory steps in doing DA.
x
Chapter 1
Introducing Discourse Analysis
Therefore, it can be stated that when doing DA, higher level of thinking and
analysis are needed in order to cover many aspects. Discourse analysts need
comparisons between theories, methods, and conceptual elements in one unit of
analysis. It is not only studying one linguistic unit but broader linguistic units. DA is
multidisciplinary approach which covers various areas in linguistic study such as
sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, etc. Its main concern is to analyze the use of
language in a broader context in society. It is not only studying sentences but in and
out of the sentences.
DA will accumulate the time, the world, language, and thought into pragmatic
analysis, which will be then processed in the account of discourse. Cook (1990, p. 44)
states that, “pragmatics provides a means of relating stretches of language to be
physical, social, and psychological world” whereas discourse functions to “cover the
interactiu i i i i
Discourse tries to respect the ways social members interpret, orient to, and
categorize the social work.
6. Sequentiality
Discourse is linear. This indicates that description and interpretation should be
regarded as one unit of analysis.
7. Constructivity
Discourses will be constructive if each unit is used and analyzed as a part of
broader unit. In addition, discourses also need to create structure in hierarchical
form.
8. Levels and Dimensions
There are various levels or layers and various dimensions in the work of
discourse which need to be observed and interpreted at the same time as one
single unit of analysis. One level should be related to other levels.
9. Meaning and function
In analyzing discourse, meaning and function are two important elements that
should be closely connected.
10. Rules
There are also some rules to be observed as a unit of analysis. It is indeed “rule
governed”.
11. Strategies
Language users also know and apply mental and interactional strategies in the
effective understanding and accomplishment of discourse and the realization of
communicative goals
12. Social cognition
In analyzing discourse, mental process and representations in the production and
understanding text and talk are also brought together as parts of analysis.
Dijk (1997, pp. 28-30)
Those differences had been caught by some scholars in the field of linguistics.
In facts these two kinds on analysis are different not only in its main area of analysis
but also in the way the analysts in the two disciplines approach the problems in
language use.
Levinson (1987) differentiate the different approach applied by the two
disciplines, in which DA applies deductive approach whereas CA applies inductive
approach. For CA, search is based on records of “naturally occurring conversations”,
whereas for DA, search is based on “immediate categorization of usually restricted
data” (Levinson, 1987, pp. 286-287).
It should be noted that CA lies much on the use of “naturally occurring data”.
To analyze the data, CA proceeds by (1) examination of collections of cases such as
examining a sequence of turns which seems to display some interesting properties, (2)
developing a more formal and detailed account of the organization of the target
exchange, examining the sequential context of the phenomenon and (3) returning to
data to determine if other instances of the phenomenon can be described in terms of
this account (Wooffitt, 2005, pp. 40-41).
Dijk (2001) mentions some requirements for CDA. One of them is the focus
more on social and political issues. To provide critical analysis, CDA not merely
describes “discourse structures”, but also explains them in terms of “properties of
social interaction and especially social structure”. More specifically, CDA focuses on
1.6 Historical Overview
It is important to see how the emergence of DA as a discipline in linguistics.
DA grew from different disciplines in the 1969s and early 1970s, including linguistics,
semiotics, psychology, anthropology, and sociology (McCarthy, 1991, p. 5).
Dijk (1985, p. 1) indeed states that DA is both an old and new discipline. Its
origin can be traced back to the study of language, public speech, and literature more
than 2000 years ago. It was started when Sellig Harris published a paper with the title
DA, in which he was interested in the distribution of linguistic elements in extended
texts. In that article, Harris initiated a search for language rules to explain the
connection between sentences within a text by using an extended grammar (Harris,
1952, 1964, cited in Cook, 1990, p. 13).
Dell Hymes is also important in this historical background when he provided
sociological perspectives with the study of speech in social settings. Austin (1962),
Searle (1969), and Grice (1975) were also influential in the study of language as
social action. These are reflected in the theories of speech acts and conversational
maxim (McCarthy, 1991, p. 5).
In British, the work of DA is mainly influenced by Halliday which
emphasizes the “social functions of language and the thematic and informational
structure of speech and writing”. In America, DA has been dominated by work within
ethno-methodological tradition. This categorizes on the examination of the types of
speech acts such as storytelling, greeting rituals, and verbal duels in different cultural
and social settings. This can be seen by the work of Hymes and Gumperz (1972)
(McCarthy, 1991, p. 6).
In studying the language, there are some parts of linguistics that need certain
understanding. Starting from the study of sound system, language learners are
directed to learn Phonetics and Phonology. Later, learners need to go one level up to
the word level, that is studying the word formations, known as Morphology. After
word formation, sentence construction is learned in the subject of Syntax. Later,
language learners will study about Semantics or Pragmatics with their own concerns.
When learners study on the text, they then come to the high level of analysis of the
language, called DA.
Therefore, in doing DA, level of understanding and analysis is not only on
sound, or word, or sentences only, but also what is beyond the sound, word, or
sentences. High level of interpretation, elaboration, analysis is needed in doing DA,
which can be obtained from the previous level of understanding in linguistics.
For students to learn DA, it is highly recommended that they had been through
the previous studies of linguistic aspects. The important reason is that understanding
on lower linguistic levels is needed to acquire deeper understanding of discourse and
also to be able to analyze the discourse.
1.8 Summary
This chapter has explained the important ideas of discourse as the basic
concept in understanding DA. The main point is that a study on discourse is not only
looking at the sentence but also beneath the sentence, even above the sentence. Some
terms are explained to acquire comparison of the depth in analysis of the DA.
Conversation Analysis (CA) and Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) are other terms
that are usually used in approaching the discourse which of course requires specific
attention or point of view in the discourse.
Structurational paradigm
Table 3: Leech
Formalism Functionalism
Language is a mental phenomenon Language is a social phenomenon
Linguistic universals are derived from a
Linguistic universals are derived from the
common genetic linguistics inheritance of
universality of the uses to which language
the human species is put in human society
Children acquisition is explained in terms
Children acquisition is explained in terms
of a built-in human capacity to learnof the development of the child’s
language communicative needs and abilities in
society
Language is studied as an autonomous Language is studied in relation to its social
system function
(Cited in Schriffin, 1994, pp. 21-22)
2.1.3 Context
It is important for the discourse analysts to look at relating factors not only on
the language itself but also outside the language. What is seen in the text is as
important as what is not seen in the text. This acquires the explanation about context,
cohesion, and coherence as important aspects of looking at a discourse.
Widdowson defines context as “situation in which we find ourselves, the
actual circumstances of time and place, the here and now of the home, school, the
work place, and so on”. Context is further described as “an abstract representation of a
state of affairs”. Therefore, it is not “what is perceived in a particular situation, but
what is conceived as relevant” (2007, pp. 19-21) . In line with this, Cook (1990, p. 14)
comments that examining a context in a language require a look at several features
outside of a language such as the situation, the people involved, what they know and
what they doing”.
A quotation from Dijk (2008) may also give brief definition about context.
Dijk states that the notion of context is used whenever we want to indicate that some
phenomenon, event, action or discourse needs to be seen or studied in relationship to
its environment, that is, its “surrounding” conditions and consequences (p. 4). This is
supported by Martin (2001, p. 35) who states that “the goal of DA is to build a model
that places texts in their social contexts and looks comprehensively at the resources
which both integrate and situate them”
Kramsch (1998) defines context in two ways, namely “context of situation”
and “context of culture”. Context of situation relates to “understanding on why, what
how something is said” whereas context of culture relates to “the linkage of the words,
beliefs, and mindsets to other aspects”. Some aspects may contribute to this context of
culture such as tribal economics, social organization, kinship patterns, fertility rites,
seasonal rhythms, concepts of time, and spaces (p. 26).
One important t
Halliday and Hasan (1976) describe that the categories of sentences to be
constituted as a text will be depending on the cohesion of the text. In order to create a
good cohesion in the text, cohesive relaters or connectors are needed. One type is
known as explicit markers such as (1) additive—and, or, furthermore, similarly, in
addition, (2) adversative—but, however, on the other hand, nevertheless, (3)
causal—so, consequently, for this reason, it follows from this, (4) temporal—then,
after that, an hour later, finally, at last. In addition, interpret the text, certain
relationship in the text need to be observed. When interpretation lies outside the text,
in the context of situation, exophoric relations are the focus whereas when the
interpretation lies within the text, there is endophoric relations, which form cohesive
ties within the text. Endophoric relations are two kinds, called anaphoric relations,
which look back in the text for interpretation and cataphoric relations which look
forward in the text for interpretation (Hasan and Halliday, 1976, cited in Brown and
Yule, 1983, pp. 190-191).
Cohesion can also be achieved by the use of co-reference such (1) repeated
form, in which one of the phrase or word is repeated twice or more in a sentence, (2)
partially repeated form—repeating a part of the phrase or sentence, (3) lexical
replacement, using another word to replace the preceding one such as by synonym, (4)
pronominal form, (5) substituted form, and elided form. In addition, cohesion can be
derived from lexical relationships such as hypogymy (daffodil is a hyponym for a
flower), partwhole (arm is a part of a man), collocability (Monday relates to Tuesday),
comparison, syntactic repetition, consistency of tense, stylistic choice, and so on
(Hasan and Halliday, cited in Brown and Yule, 1983, pp. 193-194).
Those cohesive ties or devices have important roles to supply cohesive
relations in the text. Therefore, in analyzing a form of a discourse, texture of the text
or the linkage of the text can be examined to understand the text and infer what is
happening in the text.
Besides being cohesive, a text has to be coherent as well. Cohesion may be
achieved by the use of cohesive devices within the text. However, a text may be
cohesive seen from the use of cohesive devices but it is not coherent. In relation to
this, Kramsch (1998, p. 49) states as follows:
cohesive devices are only aids to understanding and can only be effective to the
extent that they enable readers (or listeners) to construct meaning that makes
contextual sense to them, in other words to the extent that the cohesion in the text
enables them to derive a coherent discourse from it.
Kramsch (1998, p. 28) comments that coherence cannot be seen in the
utterance of the speakers. It should be created in the minds of speakers and hearers by
making inferences on what they hear. Kramsch comments as follows:
The extent to which a text is interpreted as coherent discourse will always depend on
how far it can be related externally to contextual realities, to the ideational and
interpersonal schemata that readers are familiar with in the particular socio-cultural
world they live in (1998, p. 28)
2.2.4 Pragmatics
Crystal (2003) notes that a pragmatics is “a study about factors governing our
choice of language in social interaction and the effects of the choice on others” (p.
120). Some of those factors will influence the speakers’ selection of sounds,
grammatical constructions, and vocabulary from the resources of language. Like the
previous parts, pragmatics is also another broad approach to discourse. Pragmatics,
with its concerns on three main points namely meaning, context, and communication,
provides a broader area to explore people’s communication.
The best example of using pragmatics as an approach to discourse is the
work of Grice which is in the form of four specific maxims under the “cooperative
principle”. The four maxims are maxim of quantity, quality, relation, and manner.
Through the four maxims, implicatures can be treated; a maxim can be followed, a
maxim can be violated or flouted. The application of these “cooperative principle” to
discourse leads to a particular view of discourse and its analysis. Discourse as text
whose contexts (including cognitive, social, and linguistic contexts) allow the
interpretation of speaker meaning in utterances (Schriffin, 1994, p. 195, 227).
Levinson (1987, p. 54) mentions some examples of topics to be analyzed by
using pragmatics. One of them is the use of deixis such as the use of demonstratives,
first and second pronouns, tense, specific time and place adverbs like now and here,
and a variety of other grammatical features tied directly to the circumstances of
utterance. Other possible topics are conversational implicatures, and conversational
structures such as turn-taking, adjacency pairs, etc.
2.3 Summary
The important ideas dealt in this chapter are about the important concepts and
approaches in discourse study. One of the important points is that DA is a study not
only in the forms but also in the functions. The paradigms of structural or formal vs.
contextual or functional best described the focus of doing DA. In addition, the
approaches offered by Schriffin (1994) give choices of ways of looking and analyzing
discourses, all of them lead discourse analysts to see language use in their
interpretation. One type of language use in discourse can be analyzed by one or more
approaches proposed above.
Therefore, one text, either spoken or written, can be analyzed by looking at the
use of grammatical patterns, vocabulary choices, and phonological cases. In her study
of politeness in Bugis, Mahmud (2008) found some grammatical expressions of Bugis
politeness such as the use of pronouns, participant avoiders, and some phonological
alternations, which are regarded as linguistic aspects of Bugis politeness.
3.2 Sociolinguistics
Levi-Strauss says “to say language is to say society” (cited in Duranti, 1997, p.
337). This means that one concept of society can be interpreted from the way
language is used by the particular groups within the society. The pattern of social life
in one community can be seen from the language they use in communicating and
interacting. This can be studied in the area of sociolinguistics.
Sociolinguistics is a branch of linguistic study whose main concern is on the
relationship between language and society. Crystal (2003) puts definition about
sociolinguistics which is “the study of the interaction between language and the
structure and functioning of society” (p. 418). In Chambers Concise Dictionary (2004,
p. 1146), sociolinguistics is defined as “the study of the relationships between
language and the society which uses it”. Romaine (1994, p. 222) also comments that
sociolinguistics aims to explain variations of language by looking at “social forces or
agents”.
Therefore, sociolinguistics is the study about how language is used in a
particular society. This means that in studying a particular language in a particular
society, one will also study the whole society. It is because the study of a particular
language in one society has a purpose of knowing that society. In fact, sociolinguistic
study can extend its analysis in other areas, and of course, needs different perspectives
in its analysis. One of them is the integration of cultural aspects of using language.
Stubbs (1983) states that sociolinguistics requires a correlative study on many
linguistic features (p. 8). Since the main focus of sociolinguistics is on how people
interact using a language in one particular society, analysis in terms of discourse in
this discipline need to investigate how those people use the language, especially in the
forms of spoken language. As stated by Stubbs (1983, p. 7) as follows:
Sociolinguistics will ultimately have to be based on analysis of how people actually
talk to each other in everyday settings, such as streets, pubs, shops, restaurants, buses,
trains, schools, doctor’s surgeries, factories, and homes. Therefore, sociolinguistics
will have to incorporate analyzes of how conversation works: that is how talk between
people is organized; what makes it coherent and understandable; how people
introduce and change topics; how they interrupt, ask questions, give or evade answers;
and in general, how the conversational flow is maintained or disrupted
3.3 Psycholinguistics
We define psycholinguistics as the study about the integrated study between
language and thought. Crystal (2003, p. 418) defines psycholinguistics as “the study
of the relationship between linguistic behaviour and the psychological processes (e.g.
memory, attention)”. In Chambers Concise Dictionary, psycholinguistics is defined as
“the psychological study of language development and the relationship between
language and mental processes, e.g. memory, mental disorders, etc” (2004, p. 963).
Psycholinguistics also becomes the field of study for DA. In the field of
psycholinguistics, discourse analysts will pay attention to the issues related to
language comprehension. In line with this, Dardjowidjojo (2008) states that there are
four important matters to be studied in psycholinguistics: (1) comprehension, mental
processes experienced by humans to understand about particular things, (2)
production, mental processes of humans to be able to utter particular language, (3)
biological and neurological concerns which make humans can speak a language, and
(4) language acquisition, how children can acquire their languages throughout their
development (p. 7). These four aspects may be reflected in the way people use a
language which can also be analyzed under the discipline of DA .
One example of study in this discipline is the study on how children aged
below 6 years old acquire their first and second language. Analysis can be in the
forms of talk they produced and strategies to communicate with the other children or
to the older people such as their parents.
3.5 Philosophy
Philosophy is another field which becomes the areas of studies in DA. This
may be related to philosophical linguistics. In this field, the main concern is the
relationship between language and its meanings, or which is commonly known as the
disciplines of semantics.
Brown and Yule (1983) emphasize that philosophical linguistics are
particularly concerned with “semantic relationships between constructed pairs of
sentences and with their syntactic realizations”. It also concerns with “relationships
between sentences” (p. viii). An example of study in this aspect is about the use of
metaphors or any kinds of figures of speech in a particular text.
3.6 History
History also becomes a major in DA. It can have several functions for
historians. Struever (1985) mentions the functions of DA for historians as both for
critique and self-critique. It functions as (1) a tool of inquiry in the traditional task of
interpretation of source, the exploitation of the archive of pertinent discourses that the
historians use to reconstruct the past (2) a tool to reveal the discursive strategies of
presentation. Struever furthermore mentions that there are three main types of
historical discourse, namely history as narrative, rhetorical style, and argument (1985,
p. 250).
There are some approaches to apply T/F3 12 Tf0.000008872 0 595.4 841.ETQ9s 4(ruc)i4o d 6tics
involving a synthesis of discourse and diachrony by looking at changes in discourse
marking, functions, and structures over time (pp. 13-140).
Brinton (2001) mentions some aspects to be concerned in historical DA. The
first one is philologist on “mystery words”, inflectional forms, collocations, and
textual structures. Examples as topic marking, participant tracking, given/new
information, narrative segmentation, expressions of subjectivity, and internal or
external evaluation. The second one is examination of usual activities of diachronic
linguistics combined with a consideration of discourse factors such as sources, causes,
or motivation of changes. The third is the study of origin, diachronic development,
loss of discourse markers, changes in discourse structures, or alterations in text types
over time (p. 152).
Historical account of one particular society can become a good area of doing
DA. For example, historical record of Bugis history (e.g. attoriolong, Lontara Latoa,
etc), can be analyzed to see the linguistic styles or Bugis expressions in Bugis society
compared to the present Bugis community.
3.7 Literature
Another discipline of study in DA is on literature. It should be noted that in
doing DA, written productions, which are commonly known as “literary text” can also
be a part of analysis. Mey (2001) confirms that a pragmatic study of literary activity
can be concentrated to “the features that characterize the dialectic aspect of literary
production” (p. 788).
Studies will be directed to investigate the usage of literary works as resources
of texts for analysis. Any kinds of literary work such as poems, drama, short stories,
and novels can be used as resources of text to analyze. Drama, for example, can be
used to analyze spoken discourse. Students can be assigned to perform one type of
drama in the class. The performance can be recorded and interpreted later. Next
activity will be about elaborating the transcribed texts in relation to language use (e.g.
phonological, morphological, context).
3.8 Law
Shuy (2001) states that “the area of law provides an open opportunity for DA”
and that “law is a fertile field for DA”’. The field of law is generally regarded “as a
field containing written discourse” and that “cases occurring in court are preserved in
written form to serve as the basis for later decisions and to record the cases for later
review”. Shuy mentions some forms of written or spoken text that can be obtained
from law field such as motions, counterclaims, judges’ opinions, trial testimony,
questioning, and argument (2001, p. 437).
In this law field, or as referred by Shuy (2001) as “legal context”, many
possibilities of occurring cases can become the focus of doing DA, either in the form
of written or spoken language. An example is the study of criminal cases. The study
can be focused on court hearings. A case of divorce, for example, may provide written
and spoken discourse on reasons for sexual harassment in family. Spoken data can be
obtained by recording the explanations of suspects, or any related persons. Shuy’s
study (1993, cited in Shuy, 2001, p. 440), for example, analyzed speech acts such as
promising, offering, denying, agreeing, threatening, warning, and apologizing as
evidence in criminal cases.
3.9 Education
The field of education provides outstanding resources for doing DA. That is
because people involved in the areas of educations, teachers, school principals,
students can have contributions to the study of talks. Rogers (2004) points out the
important roles of education as the source of DA as follows:
that educational contexts are potential sources of studying discourses such as
interactions between teachers and students, curriculum documents, institutional
meetings, state think tanks charged to address current educational issues. Therefore,
researchers are able to describe, interpret, and explain the relationships among
language and important educational issues (p. 10).
Shuy and Griffin (cited in Adger, 2001, p. 503) has noted that “whatever goes
on there, what they do in schools on any day is talk”. Adger furthermore states that
“the fabric of schooling is woven in linguistic interaction” (2001, p. 503). Adger
(2001) further mentions the focuses of DA in educational settings such as “to uncover
the ways in which talk at school is unique and thus what children must be able to do
linguistically in order to succeed there” (p. 503).
Therefore, interaction in the schools is potential issues in DA. The focus can be
in the class activities, such as teaching by teachers and learning by students. Teachers
and students interactions in the class, for examples, questions and answers, lecturing,
class discussion, can be the focus of DA.
Adger (2001) promotes some topics to be explored in educational settings
such as exploring classroom interaction as cultural practice (e.g. cultural background
of teachers and students), literacy development of students (e.g. the acquisition and
use of written language, the interweaving of talk and text, and the genres or discourses
associated with schools), and discourse study of second language development.
An example of study is the use of code-switching in the class by teachers and
students (Elridge, 1996; Hutahuruk, 2009). Focus of study can be by observing the
kinds of languages used by teachers and students in the classroom interactions and
their reasons to switch their languages to one another.
3.10 Politics
Politics is one of the potential fields of exploring discourses. Activities in
political matters can provide critical areas and issues to be potentially explored in
relation to discourses. In this discipline, ideas on power and other related issues may
be brought into discussion. Wilson (2001) comments that studies of political matters
have become the interest of discourse analysts since the early 1980s and its main
purpose is to find out how “language choice is manipulated for specific political effect”
(p. 410).
One example of study in this political discourse is a study of Obama’s speech
by Yulimar (2010) and Ginting (2009). Ginting in his study, for example, found some
differences in the ways the two presidents, Obama and the former Indonesian
President, Soesilo Bambang Yudoyono delivered their speech in their inauguration
day. Some differences can be seen in terms of politeness, the use of identity and group
markers, promising, and offering, and so on.
3.11 Summary
The above explanation only covers some of the disciplines under the scope of
DA. Each of them provides nuanced and broad issues to be explored under the
discipline of DA. I belief that there are still some other disciplines that had not been
mentioned through this chapter. I just want to categorize that whatever there are
people interacting to each other by using a language, potential data for discourse are
there.
3.12 Questions for Discussion
1. What are the different approaches applied in discourse for the disciplines
discussed in this chapter?
2. Find one example of issue that can be analyzed under each of the discipline
above.
3. Find one article in national or international journal that become the example of
work of DA in those above discipline.
DOING DISCOURSE ANALYSIS: AN INTRODUCTION
By
MURNI MAHMUD
i
This book is dedicated to:
ii
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
Bismillahirrahmanirrahim
In the name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful
Semoga gelar yang saya terima ini bukan hanya menjadikan nama saya
lebih panjang, tetapi lebih sebagai motivasi untuk terus berkarya
iii
I ask for forgiveness for not mentioning all the names in this book. I do
hope this book will become good resource for readings in Discourse Analysis and
in linguistic study as a whole.
Murni Mahmud
iv
CONTENTS
DEDICATION ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT iii
CONTENTS v
AUTHOR’S PREFACE vii
FOREWORD x
Chapter 1 Introducing Discourse Analysis 1
1.1 What is Discourse 1
1.2 Discourse Analysis (DA) 3
1.3 Content Analysis 7
1.4 Conversation Analysis (CA) 8
1.5 Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) 10
1.6 Historical Overview 11
1.7 Why Discourse Analysis 12
1.8 Summary 13
1.92 Tm0 g0 G[( )] TJETQq0.000008872 0 595.4 841.8 reW* nBT/F5 12 Tnf1 0 0 1 268
v
4.1 Areas of Discourse Analysis 39
4.1.1 Classroom Interaction 39
4.1.2 Courtroom Interaction 40
4.1.3 Children Conversation 40
4.1.4 Mass Media and Social Media 41
4.1.5 Other Formal and Informal Settings 41
4.2 Issues in Discourse Analysis 42
4.2.1 Politeness 42
4.2.2 Speech Acts 43
4.2.3 Power Conflict 44
4.2.4 Gender-Related Issues 45
4.2.5 Non-Verbal Communication 46
4.2.6 Code-Switching 47
4.2.7 Discourse Markers 48
4.2.8 Teacher Talk 49
4.2.9 Summary 49
4.2.10 Questions for Discussion 50
Chapter 5 Methods of Discourse Analysis 51
5.1 The Ground 51
5.2 Data Collection 54
5.2.1 Types of Discourse Data 54
5.2.2 Methods of Producing Data 56
5.3 Data Analysis 60
5.3.1 Selecting Data 60
5.3.2 Transcription 61
5.3.3 Interpreting 62
5.3.4 Reporting 65
5.4 Summary 65
5.5 Questions for Discussion 66
Chapter 6 Samples of Discourse Analysis 68
6.1 Politeness 68
6.2 Conversational Implicature 78
6.3 Code-Switching 81
6.4 Speech Acts 84
6.5 Summary 86
6.7 Questions for Discussion 86
References 87
Curriculum Vitae 95
vi
AUTHOR’S PREFACE
The writing of this book is inspired by the need to provide appropriate
books in the course of Discourse Analysis. This course is an important part of
linguistic study. This course becomes the main subject studied by university
students in all levels, in undergraduate degree, in master degree, and in the
doctorate degree. In addition, Discourse Analysis, which I then wrote as DA in
this book is now a trending method in doing research, especially in qualitative
research. Researchers have been using this method in data analysis, besides the
use of quasi-experimental design.
My main intention in writing this book is to explore the theoretical
background of DA as a branch of study in linguistics. I attempt as well to examine
the methods used in doing DA and later to give exercises for students in doing DA.
This book can become a good reference for students in doing DA, as additional
sources for doing DA.
During the time I teach this course, I find some interesting cases. Students
find many copied books. They have plenty of books on DA copied from original
books. They can also read many resources about DA from the internet through
free search engines such as Google or Wikipedia. Indeed, they can download a
free e-book from the internet about DA. The problem that I think it is urgent is
that those students find difficulties to understand the theories of DA. Not only that,
several students told me that they had learned DA in their level before such as in
undergraduate program; however, they still do not understand what DA is exactly.
More problems exist when they were asked about what to do in DA. Often when
they had read so many books in DA, problems occurred when the questions came
to “how to do DA?”. What they need besides learning theories is actually
practicing to apply DA in their work, their paper, and also in their research later.
In undergraduate degree, for example, when I explained a little bit about
DA in the class of Introduction to Linguistics as a part of linguistic study, I got the
impression that the students had not got ideas about it. Especially when I
explained that DA requires higher level of thinking as it is about analysis not only
on the sentences, clauses, or phrases, but within the sentences, clauses, or phrases,
students said that the study must be very difficult.
In master degree program when I am usually given the responsibility to
teach the course, students gave a lot comments. One of them is about the
difficulties they encountered when doing DA, especially when they were given
the tasks to analyze spoken discourses. Problems cover when they had to produce
data by recording, transcribing the collected data, and later interpreting the data.
One of the students said, “let’s pray so we can pass this subject”. Another
comment, “I always got dizzy after joining the class DA”. Some students said that
they did not actually know or understand about DA. I asked them again, “what did
you do during the course?”. They said “it was just discussion about theories”. My
impression is that what they want actually is not only theories and concepts on
DA, but also on practices of doing DA.
Surprisingly, students in the post-graduate program (S3) admitted that DA
is a new thing for them. They said, “It is new for me”. When I asked whether they
vii
had learned it before, they said, “We never studied it before”. Another comment
was “I have studied it but I did not know what DA was”. When I asked their
reasons, they said that they only learned about theories, no methods or practices.
viii
from my study on Politeness in Bugis, a part of my Ph.D thesis. Because my
intention is not only for doing DA in English language only, I also provide some
examples from other languages, such as Bugis language and Indonesian language.
The book was written in six chapters. In the first chapter, I provide
theories and concepts that readers need to have as a starting point in
understanding DA. The second chapter is about some important concepts and
approaches for DA. The third chapter is about the disciplines which become the
scope of study in DA. Reading this chapter will give underlying ideas about what
fields to be discussed in order to use and do DA. The fourth part is about the areas
and issues in doing DA containing the setting or areas and the issues that may be
taken as a focus in doing DA. The fifth part of the book is about the methods of
doing DA, providing the steps in doing DA and aspects related to the process of
collecting and analyzing the discourse data. The sixth chapter is examples of work
in doing DA, which are very important as a model in doing DA. Exercises and
examples of articles written in DA are also provided.
Since this is the first edition, I guess that the book is still far from being
perfect. I still do the editing process and wish to provide better product in the next
edition.
The Author,
Murni Mahmud, 26 November 2016
ix
FOREWORD
Head of English Study Program, Graduate Program, State University of
Makassar
It is my privilege to introduce this book entitled “Doing Discourse
Analysis: An Introduction”, written by Murni Mahmud, Professor in English
Education Department, Faculty of Languages and Literature, State University of
Makassar. Murni Mahmud is majoring in Anthropology Linguistics. She teaches
some subjects in the area of Linguistics such as Sociolinguistics, Anthropology
Linguistics, Morphology, Syntax, and Discourse Analysis (DA).
This book is expected to provide resources in the study of DA. This
subject has become an important subject and has been chosen as a compulsory
subject in the English Study Program, the Graduate Program, State University of
Makassar. Plenty of books on DA are available, copied and obtained from e-books.
This book at least provides good examples and good procedures in doing DA.
What students need is also practices or strategies of applying DA.
Hopefully this book gives benefit in the study of DA. I expect that students
in the Graduate Program, especially in English Study Program, can choose DA as
one method in doing their research. With the increasing interest of qualitative
research, hopefully this book may give introductory steps in doing DA.
x
Chapter 5
Methods of Discourse Analysis
After exploring some of the concepts, disciplines, areas, and issues in doing
Discourse Analysis (DA), I should come to another important aspect, which I consider
as the most important part, that is the methods in doing DA. Theories and concepts in
doing DA had been explored, then ways of doing it or methods are the next important
idea. I should say that theory without practice is nothing, and therefore, what I
explored in this chapter is the basic idea of directing the researcher or discourse
analysts to do the DA in practice.
For that purpose, I divide this part into three important sections. The first
section, which I entitle ‘The Ground’ is about the first step in doing DA, that is the
identifications of problems for investigations. This includes the process of deciding
the discipline, areas, and issues in doing DA. The second one is the data collections
procedures covering some of the important aspects in collecting data. Forms or types
of discourse need to be explained first as the compass in determining the focus,
whether written or spoken. The third or the last section is some steps in process of
analyzing, such as data selection, transcription, interpretation, and reporting.
Looking at the above example, it can be seen that the project of doing DA will
be in the classroom setting, under the discipline of sociolinguistics. The topics to
investigate is about the language use focusing on two important aspects namely the
types of language use and the reasons for using those types of language use. This
information leads the researcher to decide the next steps in collecting data. He or she
needs to collect data in the classroom by recording teachers’ conversation in the class
such as in teaching or in class discussion.
5.2.2.2 Archives
Archives refer to collections of any documentaries. These are potential sources
for discourse as they contain different types of discourse pertaining to the same topic,
for example, interviews, speeches, and conversations. Wood and Kroger (2000)
identify some examples of documents from archives as follows:
1. Documentaries and recordings of drama, comedy, news, public affairs, and
talk shows provided by the library
2. Written documents (policy, legal statutes) as well as recording conversations
such as emergency calls, telephone inquiries by government departments
3. Copies of correspondence or of audiotapes of telephone calls by private
companies and organizations such as telephone companies, consumer
organization, airlines, etc.
4. Audiotapes of training procedures in various educational institutions,
government programs, and private industries such as simulations of
physician-patient interactions, the training of customer service representatives,
therapy conducted by apprentice clinicians
(p. 71).
5.2.2.3 Interviews
Interviews have very important roles in doing DA. They are used frequently
as supporting method to elicit data. For example, when recordings have been
performed, it is necessary to interview the respondents being recorded about the
results of the recordings. When doing written DA, for example, analyzing narrative
texts, interviews are needed to acquire clear explanations for written texts.
It is important to know the differences between interviews in doing DA and
general interviews that might have been familiar with the readers. As noted by Wood
and Kroger, differences lie on theories and procedures. Interviews in DA is just
similar to interviews in qualitative research in which they apply open ended questions
and that the answers are not expected to be more specified. In DA, interviewers are
trying to probe more possible answers and expect to encourage participants to speak
fully (2000, p. 72). Potter and Wetherell (1987, p. 164) emphasize that the interviewer
should try “to generate interpretative contexts in such a way that the connections
between the interviewee’s accounting practice and variations in functional context
become clear”.
5.2.2.4 Experiments
Experiments can be conducted for doing DA for some reasons. It can be used
by a researcher who is not an interviewer or other sort of interactant. In this way,
participants are assigned to different conditions because such experiments tend to
involve inappropriate comparisons and quantitative analysis and to obscure variability
both between and within participants. Researchers may wish to bring participants
together to discuss a particular topic or to carry out a specific task. The interaction
may be dyadic or in the form of a focus or discussion group (Wood and Kroger, 2000,
p. 74).
5.3.2 Transcription
When data have been selected based on the above criteria, the next step is
preparation for analysis. One step to be done for spoken language is transcription
which refers to the “transformation of spoken discourse into a written form that is
fully amenable to analysis and available for inclusion in the report of the research”
(Wood and Kroger, 2000, p. 82).
Transcription is very important in doing DA, especially in doing spoken
discourse. Transcription makes the spoken discourse data readable. Often the spoken
language from the recordings is not good language and therefore need to be
transcribed. Wood and Kroger (2000, p. 82) comment that transcription is needed
because it is difficult to keep the features of discourse in mind while listening to the
data. Hutchby and Wooffitt, (1998, p. 92) confirms that transcription is required in
order that a record of the data can be made available to others for checking the
analysis and also for reanalysis. Edwards (2001, p. 321) also stresses the function of
transcription which is invaluable as it provides “a distillation of the events of an
interaction”.
In doing the transcription, it is important to pay attention to details of spoken
interactions such as pauses, intonation, overlap, interjection, silences, vowel quality,
pitch, etc. These may apply symbols for transcriptions. Some symbols for
transcriptions used for conversations are as follows:
. Final intonation contour (usually a low falling pitch).
, Continuing intonation contour (level, or slight rise).
? Appeal intonation contour (sharp rise in pitch).
-- Truncated/abandoned Intonation Unit.
- Truncated word.
@ One pulse of laughter.
% Glottal stop.
.. Short pause (less than roughly 0.8 seconds)
... Long pause (longer than roughly 0.8 seconds)
<@ words @> Words are spoken while laughing; can also be written @word @word
@word.
<X words X> Uncertain transcription.
(text) explaining what the conversation/the turn is about
[text] giving the literal meaning of the conversations
(text)
(text) indicating interjections
(adapted from Du Bois et al, 1993, pp. 45-90)
In addition, Edwards (2001, p. 330) offers some aspects to be noted in doing the
transcription in order to be effective tool to reveal the corresponding meaning in the
discourse data. Some of them are words, units of analysis, pauses, prosody, rhythm and
coordination, turn-taking and nonverbal aspects and events.
5.3.3. Interpreting
In doing the interpretation, DA requires “a particular orientation to texts, a
particular frame of mind” (Wood and Kroger, 2000, p. 91). Therefore, careful
examinations on texts are needed to get the thread of the discourse. Some steps to be
followed in doing the interpretations are explained here:
1. As you read through a text, ask yourself how you are reading it and why you
are reading in this way. In this process, try to do some exercises such as
identifying the features of the text and the devices that are employed that
produce the reading
2. Do not ignore the obvious. This is a good step to start. It is important to note
that the point of DA is not to generate esoteric accounts of interpretation,
documents, and so on, but to show precisely how the features of the discourse
make particular readings or reactions possible, plausible, and understandable.
3. It is important to note that the focus on the literal meaning of an utterance or
text may be the least helpful analytic strategy. Therefore, it is highly
recommended to concentrate on what the speaker or writer is doing, how the
segment is related to other segments, and so on.
4. Think about what is not there in both content and form
5. Consider whether the critical issue is that something which is included, not
what it is.
6. Play with the text, by looking at the possibilities if a particular item (word or
phrases) were omitted, or phrased differently, consider the substitutions or
combination with some other items.
7. Look carefully at how text is structured, shaped, and ordered in both
individual segments and overall, because structures are ways of achieving both
content and function.
8. Be alert for multiple functions of discourse, which may not be clearly seen in
the topic, content, structure, and so on in initial readings.
9. It may also be useful to forget that what is doing is in terms of DA
10. Realize that there are not always appropriate terms available for describing
discourse and naming its function, and therefore, it is possible to develop new
terms or new concepts for discourse devices and functions
11. Categorization is not only an activity of the analyst; rather participants
themselves construct and use categories for various reasons
12. In order to focus on variation and adopt a comparative stance, adopt a
questioning stance, that is take nothing for granted. Adopt strategy of reversal
such as treating problems as solutions, solutions as problems, strength as
weakness.
13. Be familiar with the language. The more familiar with the language and how it
is used, the more sensitive will be the analysis to do. Discourse analyst need to
know and be familiar with the language.
14. All of the ideas will constitute the analytical resources. Therefore, it is not
only about how to come up with the patterns, interpretations, and so on, but
also how to justify the identification of the pattern and how to ground the
interpretation
15. Finally, permit yourself to be analysts, that is to do sort of interpretative work
involved in analysis, in generating results.
(cited in Wood and Kroger, 2000, pp. 91-95)
In addition to the above explanation, Wood and Kroger (2000) offer some
strategies for doing interpretation in the discourse. The first one is substitution, by
considering which utterance could be substituted for other utterances in the issue,
such as substituting like with for example. The second one is reframing, which
involves questioning the kinds of categories deployed by participants in terms of the
nature of the categories themselves, such as considering how utterances are referred to
as metaphorical categories. The third one is by looking at multiple functions, by
looking at the possible hierarchical and sequential organization of the talk. For
example, one utterance ‘good morning’ can be categorized as greeting or can also
function as criticism for students who come late to the class. The fourth one is by
looking at the content, more specifically the subject matter, or what the participants
are talking about. Next the fifth one is by looking at the participants’ meaning, or the
participants’ interpretation of a particular utterance or set of utterances, that is the
meaning given to the utterance. The last, but not the least is by underlying the
similarities and differences in the meanings or potential inconsistencies or
contradictories surrounding the text (pp. 107-111).
5.3.4 Reporting
The last is report the work of DA. Like other types of research paper, the
writing of the work in DA also needs to follow the general conventions of research
writing. Some parts need to be written in the report, such as methodology section,
results, and also the discussion.
An important point in writing the report is the demonstration of the data
(Wood and Kroger, 2000, p. 183). This is basically presenting one or more discourse
excerpts or extracts followed by detailed interpretation as a part of the analysis. In this
case, excerpt is more precise than other possible terms, which is picked out from the
text. Another term is extract, which can be used, although it does not necessarily refer
to text and may suggest an inappropriate concentration of that which is extracted. The
term example is avoided as it implies that the analysis was completed previously
(behind the scenes as it were) and is simply being reported it. Excerpts serve as a clue
that the analysts have active roles in both analysis and write-up, not only finding and
reporting (Ibid).
How to select the excerpts in the writing? The basic answer is not about the
number, but on the representation of the excerpts based on the raised problems. Wood
and Kroger (2000, p. 165) state that “excerpts are selected with an eye to the
possibilities of intertextual analysis”. In any particular analysis, few excerpts of one
type and large numbers on another, it can also be selected based on diversity.
5.4 Summary
Some important methods in doing DA had been discussed in this part, with the
main intention is to provide basic strategies to apply theories of DA that had been
discussed in the previous parts. Like other kinds of research, doing DA follow some
rules in doing the research such as problem identification, data collection, data
analysis, and finally writing the report based on the research.
It is worthwhile to consider the types of discourse to be investigated after
designing the problems, which then lead the researcher to locate the settings, the
issues, and the potential topics to observe. Later, choices of data collection are
available such as by recordings, interviews, or possibly by examining the existing
recordings.
Analysis is then the next step followed by the reporting. In this case, the role of
transcription is very important as the basic sources of data to investigate. Both written
and spoken discourse requires transcription as the source for analysis. Later, in the
writing of the report, taking extracts or the best term excerpts from the transcription is
demanded as the next step to demonstrate the findings that had been interpreted.
What can you do in relation to the above text? Explain in relation to DA,
conversation analysis, or content analysis!
Chapter 6
Samples of Analysis in Discourse
I finally come to this part of the book, in which I would like to give examples
of work analyzed under the work of Discourse Analysis (DA). After exploring some
previous concepts, theories, and methods, my next concern is to provide examples of
work in DA.
In this following part, I then present some work in DA that I collected from
several resources such as from journal articles that had been published. Some of them
are from students’ work of thesis that had gone through the final examination. For this
purpose, I only take some of the issues, namely politeness, conversational implicature,
code-switching, and speech acts. These issues were analyzed in some settings and
different disciplines. Politeness issues studied in this example was analyzed in the
discipline of linguistic anthropology and in education. The settings were different.
One was in one of the communities (Mahmud, 2008) and another one in classroom
context (Senowarsito, 2013). Conversational implicature was studied under the scope
of pragmatics in mass media setting, that is in one of the television programs (Nanda,
Sukyadi, & Sudarsono, 2012). Code-switching and speech acts were analyzed in
classroom setting under the scope of sociolinguistics and educations by Purnawan
(2014) and Uspayanti (2015).
6.1 Politeness
Politeness study has attracted attention of many scholars in different disciplines.
Politeness is usually studied under the scope of sociolinguistics, anthropolinguistics,
as well as pragmatics. Analysis will rely on the politeness strategies applied by the
speakers. The following examples are taken from my studies about politeness. One of
them is about politeness in Bugis society, which was studied under the discipline of
Linguistic Anthropology (Mahmud, 2008).
In discussing about politeness, Mahmud (2008) discussed some strategies of
Bugis people in expressing their politeness. One of them was the use of pronoun
choices. For analysis, conversations among several speakers were recorded,
transcribed, and brought into analysis. The main concern was to show the use of
This direct use of the second person -ko by PAM to PAS is acceptable because the
interlocutors are of similar status and are close relatives and neighbours.
(Mahmud, 2008)
Since the two speakers were the same age and social status, familiarity can be
implied from them which then caused them to use less polite pronoun in Bugis. The
writer stated “This familiarity encouraged PAM to use the familiar pronoun –ko”. For
comparison, the writer presented extract 2 about the conversation of the high social
status woman with the lower status woman, allowing analysis on the way the
interlocutors used pronoun choices influenced by the social status differences.
The explanation for the above extract as a result of the interpretation can be
seen as follows:
Although they are familiar as close neighbours, are of similar age and have been
friends since a young age, the different status PAM has as hajj and noble encourages
the non-reciprocal use of pronouns. PAM used the familiar possessive pronoun –nu
when she was asking about the price of the prawns, tassiawaé’ loppanutu? ‘how much
is a cup of those prawns of yours?’. Conversely, Hunaeda used the distant pronoun –ki’
in lo’ki’ melliwi? ‘are we [i.e. you] going to buy some?’. This shows the asymmetrical
relations among the interlocutors are influenced by their status differences.
(Mahmud, 2008)
It can be seen that there are different ways of choosing pronoun in extract 1
and extract 2. The lower status woman in extract 2 used polite pronoun to address the
high social status woman which can not be seen in extract 1. Like extract 1, the writer
put the expressions in underlined as indicators of the stressing points of the discussion.
The polite pronoun –ki’ in “lo’ki’ melliwi?” was used by H in extract 2 compare to
the less polite pronoun of nu in “tassiawaé’ loppanutu?”. Since these different
expressions were used by two women of different status, the writer could infer as the
expressions caused by the social status differences.
Discussion in extract 1 and 2 allow us to know the pronoun choices used by
speakers influenced by gender differences, and for comparison, the writer then
presented extract 3 and 4 below:
Extract 3: Asking an older fisherman
PAM was talking to Mardi (M, 65), an older fisherman without any hajj or
noble status. She was asking about Mardi’s daily activities as a fisherman.
PAM:dé’ muno’ tasi’é?
‘didn’t you go to the sea [fishing]?’
M: ba, polémuwa..’
‘yes, I have been..’
PAM:dé’ga muwala?
‘didn’t you catch anything [fish or any other seafood]?’
M: kamuwa na..
‘yes [there are] some but..’
PAM asked Mardi using the familiar pronoun mu- in all of her questions
above: dé’ muno’ tasi’é ‘didn’t you go to the sea [fishing]?’ and dé’ga muwala?
‘didn’t you take anything [fish or any other seafood]?’. Like extract 2 above, this
extract also shows an asymmetrical relation between the speakers influenced by their
status differences. Although Mardi is older, and male, because of the high status of
PAM, Mardi was addressed using the familiar pronoun
(Mahmud, 2008)
As seen in extract 3, the female speaker, PAM, used less polite pronoun mu- to
the male speaker of lower status but used more polite pronoun i-. In explaining the
pronouns used by the speakers, the writer put the expressions in underlined and
quoted again in the analysis.
Extract 4: The mosque donation
PAM was talking to an older male with high status since he is a hajj and
noble, Puang Aji Akil (PAA, 64), who is also a close relative and neighbour. At the
time, they were talking about the money owned by the mosque.
PAA: ko mabbicara makkeda iya’ malamanengngi, tappa uti’ maneng lao masigi’é
‘if [someone] accused me of taking all [the money], then I would take [the
money] directly to the mosque’
PAM:iti’ maneng lo’ka masigi’é?
‘we [i.e. you] took all [the money] to the mosque, didn’t we [i.e. you]?’
PAM used a polite device i- in iti’ instead of using mu- in muti’ which would
have been expressed in the utterance: muti’ maneng lokka masigi’é. This extract
shows the use of the first person plural inclusive agent marker as a generic marker,
where no direct reference to a first person agent is entailed. It is used to refer to a
second person agent, PAA, and it made her more distant and polite. This extract also
shows that although both speakers are familiar, being close relatives and neighbours
and have similar status as hajj and noble, pronoun choice is influenced by age and sex
differences.
(Mahmud, 2008)
The same case can be seen in extract 4. Indeed, the writer compared the
expressions in less polite to the more polite one by saying “PAM used a polite device
i- in iti’ instead of using mu- in muti’”. In addition, the use of reference as a way of
analysing can be seen in the above extract discussion.
This extract shows the use of the first person plural inclusive agent marker as a
generic marker, where no direct reference to a first person agent is entailed. It is used
to refer to a second person agent, PAA, and it made her more distant and polite
(Mahmud, 2008)
This extract also shows that although both speakers are familiar, being close relatives
and neighbours and have similar status as hajj and noble, pronoun choice is
influenced by age and sex differences
(Mahmud, 2008)
The two extracts above showed the comparison of the ways the female speaker
of high status talked to male of lower status in extract 3 but to man of the same status
in extract 4. It can be seen that there is much influence of social status on the ways the
same woman used the pronoun regardless of the gender differences. She used less
polite pronoun to man of lower status although she is younger but to the man of the
same status and the same age, she then used more polite pronoun, showing an
influence of gender differences.
Overall, the presentations of the four extracts above can represent the ideas of
using pronoun as a way of showing politeness which is influenced by social status,
age, and gender differences. The writer then wrote as follows:
The two excerpts above were intended to show examples of positive politeness
strategies, as one strategy of politeness. Senowarsito (2013) presented two excerpts
above and pointed the strategy of politeness strategies by the use of greetings, which
is categorized as the use of in-group identity marker, one strategy proposed by Brown
and Levinson (1987). In referring to the first extract, he said:
The analysis can be seen as follows:It can be identified that both students and
teacher in opening session employed positive politeness strategies as in strategy 4:
Use in-group identity markers (Brown and Levinson 1987, pp.107-108). It was done
by using group identity marker "class" for calling students, and the students use
“ma’am” to call a female teacher who was considered as a respectable person. Calling
"class" instead of "children" or "students" could be categorized as a positive politeness
strategy, that is, teacher did not position herself as the more powerful or keep a
distance from students. The strategy was to reduce the threat of face (of dignity) of
students. Similarly, referring to "ma’am" for female teacher, the students gave respect
and feel close to the teacher as well. This set of data indicates that the two parties have
good emotional relationship. This was further demonstrated in the utterance ‘I'm fine,
and you?’ ‘I’m not good’ and followed by an expression of sympathy ‘hwoow’ from
the students. This expression is done with exaggerated intonation, stress and some
aspects of prosodic to show sympathy (Brown and Levinson 1987, p.104). In addition,
because of the limitations of utterances to express something, it was possible to
express politeness non-verbally. Non-verbal forms of politeness were shown by the
teacher walking over towards students with a friendly facial expression. This form of
politeness was also expressed by the students by responding to the teacher’s greeting
enthusiastically. The teachers’ perception on learner-centered concept in teaching
learning process influenced the teachers’ perception of the need to employ politeness
strategies. Student-centered activities gave students opportunities to participate and
interact in the class. The teacher thought that it was a must for a teacher to be
emotionally close to the students. It would help him/her to communicate with students.
Because of the students’ cultural background, teacher was still placed as a respected
elder person and institutionally teacher was the single authority in teaching learning
process in the class. The finding shows that the teachers and students felt that the
power difference between them was quite small, but the students give respect to the
teachers.
(Senowarsito, 2013)
The strategy was to reduce the threat of face (of dignity) of students. Similarly,
referring to "ma’am" for female teacher, the students gave respect and feel close to
the teacher as well. This set of data indicates that the two parties have good emotional
relationship. This was further demonstrated in the utterance ‘I'm fine, and you?’ ‘I’m
not good’ and followed by an expression of sympathy ‘hwoow’ from the students.
This expression is done with exaggerated intonation, stress and some aspects of
prosodic to show sympathy (Brown and Levinson 1987, p. 104).
(Senowarsito, 2013)
The same case can be seen in the way he interpreted excerpt 2 as another
example of positive politeness strategies as seen below:
Excerpt (2) shows that the social distance and the power inequality of the students
and the teachers were small. It can be seen from the students’ response on the
teacher’s directing student’s attention ‘Hello..?’, they responded by repeating the
same expression ‘Hello..’ followed by personal marker ‘Ma’am’. It means that the
students felt close to the teacher but still gave respect to her.
(Senowarsito, 2013)
The roles of context in interpretation can be clearly seen in excerpt 2 when the
writer examined the use of “hello” by both speakers. The writer interpreted as the
signal of close relationships among the speakers, which is also categorized as positive
politeness strategies adapted from Brown and Levinson (1987).
The two excerpts presented by Senowarsito above are examples of positive
politeness strategies used by teachers and students in the class. Since this discussion is
about positive politeness, Senowarsito continued to present more excerpts regarding
negative politeness strategies used by teachers and students. Other excerpts of
conversation were demonstrated by Senowarsito to show other politeness strategies,
that is negative politeness, used by the teachers and students in the study as seen as
follows:
Negative Politeness Strategies
Negative politeness strategies are intended to avoid giving offense by showing
deference. These strategies include questioning, hedging, and presenting
disagreements as opinions (Brown and Levinson, 1987). Excerpt (9) was an
example of one of the occasions where the teacher softened his direct expression
with the conventionally polite expression ‘please’.
(9) Teacher : The first speaker. Come on. Please come here.
(Senowarsito, 2013)
(10) Teacher : e…e..e.. yea! Before we start our class today, I would like to
review a little about err..err..err.. the materials we have discussed
together. Hmm.. do you still remember the…err…err…readers’ e]e ] "
6.2 Conversational Implicature
Conversation implicature is one of the topics discussed under the scope of
pragmatics using Gricean Cooperative principle. A definition by Widdowson (2007, p.
128) best explain about conversational implicature, that is “meaning that is not
explicitly expressed but implied by the violation of the cooperative principle”.
The cooperative principle was proposed by Grice as ‘a shared assumption by
the parties in a conversation that they will co-operate with each other for the purpose
of their talk by keeping to certain conversational maxim”. According to Grice, there
are four maxims. The first one is the quantity maxim, which is the amount of
information provided. The second is the quality maxim, which is about the truth. The
third is the relation maxim, which relates to relevance. The last one is the manner
maxim, the maxim that shows how to express (cited in Widdowson (2007, p. 130).
In the following example, the writers, Nanda et al., (2012) examined the
conversations of one TV program in one TV station in Indonesia. The writer took the
episode XXII of the show purposively as sample. Qualitative method was employed
in processing the transcription of the 204 recorded implicature data. The intended
features were identified, classified, calculated and then separately analyzed based on
conversational implicature theory proposed by Grice (1975). One of the examples is
as follows:
C: Kami kembali untuk anda, pemirsa setia kami di Take Me Out Indonesia. Ini
saatnya menghadirkan pria single kedua. Namun, sebelumnya kita nyalakan
lampu mereka dulu. Nyala! (Sound of the turned-off lamps) Satu pendatang
baru langsung menemukan pasangannya. Ini harusnya jadi motivasi, lagi
penggerak buat para senior. Ayo lebih giat lagi mencari. Mungkin pria single
kedua yang akan memikat hati anda. Tunjukkan dirimu! <music> Bro.
Selamat malam, Bro.
R: Selamat malam, Choky
In expression “Ini harusnya jadi motivasi, lagi penggerak buat para senior.”
(“This should be a motivation and driving force for the seniors.”), the phrase “the
seniors” implies that if there are seniors there must be also juniors. It can be said that
the word junior is the opposite of the word senior. In this case, the word refers to the
participants who have participated earlier and latter in the program.
C: Inilah awal perjumpaan yang saya katakan, dimana awal perjumpaan kita tadi,
Pemirsa. Semua dimulai dari pandangan pertama. Pendatang baru kita
minggu ini di Take Me Out Indonesia serius mencari pasangan mapan dan
kamu adalah tipe pria yang dia cari. Pria ini bergerak super cepat, Pemirsa.
Dan dia memilih pendatang baru kita malam ini, Elsa, sang wiraswasta
otomotif dan pengusaha katering. <music> Hello, Elsa. Selamat, Bro atas
pilihan anda.
H: Thank you
(Nanda et al., 2012)
In expression, “Pendatang baru kita minggu ini di Take Me Out Indonesia serius
mencari pasangan mapan dan kamu adalah tipe pria yang dia cari.” (“Our new
comer this week in Take Me Out Indonesia seriously looks for a settled soul mate
and you are a kind of man she is looking for.”), the phrase “new comer” refers to
the female participant who stands behind the podium. The literal opposite of the
word „new‟ is „old‟. „Old‟ in this context does not refer to the scales of age but to
the time when the event took place. The words „new‟ and „old‟ in the utterance (2)
can be simply interpreted as early and later. Therefore, if there is a new comer, there
must be the old or the earlier one/s.
(Nanda et al., 2012)
Then, Nanda et al. (2012) put this expression as the main point of discussion.
Note how the writers put referring things by the use of word ‘refer’. He referred the
word ‘new comer’ to something else in the text, that is ‘the female participant who
stands behind the podium’. They also stated, ‘old’ in this context, showing that the
writers see the expressions in context. Another example is seen below:
C: … Pria ini begitu percaya diri. Saya pinjam kacamatanya saja auranya sudah
kerasa bahwa dia seorang pekerja keras. Tentukan pilihanmu sekarang. Lima,
empat, tiga, dua, satu. (Sound of the turned-off lamps) Tenang, tenang,
tenang. (sound of the turned-off lamps) Woi, woi. Slow, slow, Ladies. Pake
dulu kacamatanya, Sob. (more sounds of the turned-off lamps) Wow! Santai,
Rudi. Pendapat kamu calon dokter gigi?.
Dr.G: Menurut saya, a…(.) dari pertama ngeliatnya… Oke, sebenarnya saya kurang
suka sama jaketnya. Tapi nggak apa-apa. Ya, okelah gayanya. Sama kaya
saya usaha distro, ya? Pengen tahu aja sih kaya apa kehidupannya dia
See the way the writers explain the above extract as one example of
conversational implicature
In expression, ”Pendapat kamu calon dokter gigi?” (“Your opinion, the would-be
dentist?”), the phrase, “calon dokter gigi” (“would be dentist”), means that the
addressee is not currently a dentist. At least it does not happen in the present but it
does have a big chance to occur in the future. In other words, „a dentist to be‟ is not
already a dentist. Without ”calon dokter gigi”, it can be assumed that the person whom
the speaker talks to is a dentist at the time the utterance is uttered. Therefore, the
sentence infringes the statement‟s validity at the time it is being uttered.
(Nanda et al., 2012)
Like the previous extract above, the writer, Purnawan identified the utterances
in the text which can be categorized as another type of code-switching, that is
intra-sentential switching. Since the main focus is the same that is to identify the types
of code-switching, the writer’s analysis just showed the existence of code-switching
type in the text. Deep analysis can also be obtained when the writer tried to discuss the
reasons or the factors influencing the use of that type of code-switching in the class.
The discussion would have touched the analysis of discourse if the writer tried to
explain the differences of extract 1 and 2 in order to see the comparison of the two
extracts in terms of the type of code-switching. As discussed in the previous chapter,
looking at similarities and differences can become the focus of discussion in doing DA.
6.4 Speech Acts
As discussed previously, speech acts are potential topics for discourse and can
also be used as an approach to discourse. The following example showed the analysis
of speech acts used by teachers in the school. The writer, Uspayanti (2015) recorded
the conversations of the teachers in teaching process, transcribed, and interpreted
based on the taxonomy of Searle’s speech acts.
Like the previous examples, the extract above was taken as an example of one
of the types of the speech acts. The theory used was based on Searle’s taxonomy of
speech acts, namely five classes of speech acts: (1) representatives (e.g. asserting,
concluding), which commits the speaker to the truth of the expressed proposition, (2)
directives (e.g. requesting, questioning), which are attempts by the speaker to get the
addressee to do something or to direct someone towards some goals of the speakers,
(3) commissives (e.g. promising, threatening, offering), which commit the speaker to
some future course of action, (4) expressives (e.g. thanking, apologizing, welcoming,
congratulating), which express a psychological state and express the inner state of the
speaker, and (5) declarations (e.g. appointing, excommunicating, declaring), which
affect immediate changes in the institutional state of affairs and which tend to rely on
elaborate extra-linguistic institutions (cited in Schriffin, 1994, p. 57).
As seen in the extract above, the writer took the extract above as the example of
representative speech act. The writer explained the speech act by saying “the teacher
A used representative speech act in classroom interaction when he told the actual state”
In this way, she interpreted the utterance based on the context. In the last part, she
also stated “Regarding to the context above, the function of representative speech act
was giving information”, in which was explaining the function of the speech act. The
writer then presented another extract from the transcription to show another type of
the speech act, based on Searle’s classification. This can be seen in the following
example:
Extract 2 (Asking question)
Before the teacher A explained the news item text, he asked the student about news
item to check their understanding before explanation.
SS : Yes
T : How about this text? Please say something about news item. Apa
itu News item? Seperti apa itu?
[How about this text? Please say something about news item. What
6.6 Questions for Discussion
1. In a group of three of four, writer your paper as a sample of work of DA and
present in the class. You can choose the topics as sampled in this chapter or
you can also find other topics.
2. At the end, what are the advantages and disadvantages of doing DA?
3. Are there are difficulties you encountered in doing DA? Share with the class.
References
1
Brown, R. & Gilman, A. (1972). The pronouns of power and solidarity. In P. P.
Giglioli (Ed.), language and social context (pp. 252-282). Great Britain:
Cox & Wyman Ltd, Reading.
2
Duranti, A. (1997). Linguistic anthropology. New York: Cambridge University
Press.
Fiske,
3
Gee, J. P. (2011). How to do discourse analysis: A toolkit. New York and London:
Routledge.
Ginting, D. (2009). Gaya retorika dan strategi kesopanan dalam pidato politik
kepala negara studi kasus: Analisis isi terhadap pidato pelantikan Presiden
Barrack Obama dan Presiden Soesilo Bambang Yudoyono (pp: 51-57).
Proceeding of KOLITA 7 (Konferensi Linguistik Tahunan 7 Tingkat
Internasional). Jakarta: Unika Atma Jaya.
Holmes, J. (1995). Women, men, and politeness. London and New York:
Longman.
Izadi, A. (2013). Politeness in spoken review genre: Viva voce context. Pertanika
J. Soc. Sci. & Hum., 21(4), 1411–1429.
4
Jones, R. H. (2011). Data collection and transcription in discourse analysis. In K.
Hyland & B. Paltridge (Eds.), Bloomsbury companion to discourse
analysis (pp. 9-21). London: Bloomsbury.
Lakoff, R.T. (1976). Language and woman's place. New York: Octagon Books.
5
Milal, A. D. (2011). Indicators of the practice of power in language classrooms.
The TEFLIN Journal: A Publication on the Teaching and Learning of
English, 22(1), 1-11.
Potter, J. & Wetherell, M. (1987). Discourse and social psychology. Newbury Park,
CA: Sage Publication.
Sari, A. (2010). Female EFL learners’ request realization in relation to their ethnic
backgrounds. TEFLIN Journal: A Publication on the Teaching and
Learning of English, 21(1), 41-56. Retrieved July 28, 2014, from
http://journal.teflin.org/index.php/teflin/article/view/210/152
6
Schriffin, D. (1987). Discourse markers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Spradley, J.P. (1980). Participant observation. USA: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
Inc.
Tannen, D. (1990). You just don't understand: Women and men in conversation.
New York: Morrow.
7
Uspayanti, R. (2015). An analysis of speech act and its effects on classroom
interaction in English as a foreign language classes. A Thesis. Makassar:
Graduate Program State University of Makassar.
Wajdi, M. (2009). Alih kode dan silang kode: Strategi komunikasi dalam bahasa
diglossia Jawa. Proceeding of The Second International Conference on
Applied Linguistics (CONAPLIN 2) (pp. 304-317). Bandung: Balai Bahasa
Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia (UPI).
8
CURRICULUM VITAE
Prof. Murni Mahmud, S.Pd, M.Hum, Ph.D is the second child of two
sisters and one brother from the marriage of her parents, Haji Mahmud Mudda
and Hajjah Mustika Asse. She was born in a small village named Pakkang,
District of Segeri, Pangkep Regency, on 26 November 1973. She is the wife of
Muh. Anwar with one son, born in Canberra, Australia, Adhwa Dhaifullah Anwar.
Her formal education started from Elementary School, SD No 10 Bone,
Junior High School, SMPN Segeri, and Senior High School, SPGN Pangkep. Her
First Degree, Sarjana, was in English Education Department of IKIP Ujuang
Pandang (1991-1994), now State University of Makassar (UNM). Funded by
URGE (University Research of Graduate Education) from DIKTI, she continued
her study to American Studies Graduate Program, Gadjah Mada University
(1996-1998). She finished her Ph.D (Philosophy Doctor) in the Anthropology
Department, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, the Australian
National University, Canberra, Australia, awarded by the Australian Development
Studies (ADS) Scholarship (2003-2008).
She has published a book entitled Bahasa dan Gender dalam Masyarakat
Bugis by PUSTAKA REFLEKSI, Makassar, 2008. Another book is Politeness in
Bugis: A Study in Linguistic Anthropology (Volume I and II) by UNM Press, 2010.
Her novel entitled Sang Etnograf had just recently published by Pustaka Puitika
(2016).
Her articles have been published in scientific journals. In national journals,
her articles are as follows:
1. Language and Gender in English Language Teaching, TEFLIN Journal,
21(2), 2010, UM Malang.
2. Grammatical Expressions of Bugis Politeness, Lingua, 5 (1), 2010,
Muhammadiyah University of Malang.
3. Language Change in Bugis Society: to be Polite or to be Maju, Linguistik
Indonesia, 28(1), 2010, Atma Jaya University, Jakarta
4. Rituals of Politeness in Bugis Society, Linguistika, 18(34), 2011, Udayana
University, Bali.
5. Pronoun Choices in Bugis Society: The Road to Encode Politeness,
Humaniora, 23(2), 2011, Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta.
6. Politeness Practices in Bugis Society, Kajian Linguistik dan Sastra, 26(1),
2011, Muhammadiyah University of Surakarta.
9
7. Exploring Gender Roles in the Story of I La Galigo, Sosiohumaniora, 16(1),
2014, University of Padjajaran, Bandung.
Beside publications in national journals, she also actively writes articles
for international publications. Some of her articles had been published:
1. Speaking Bugis and Speaking Indonesian, Journal of RIMA (Review
Indonesia Malaysia Affairs), 42(2), 2008, Sydney Australia,
2. Teachers’ Ritual to be Polite in the Class, Journal of Language and Literature,
5(2), 2014, ISSN: 2078-0303, DOI: 10.7813/jll.2014/5-2/5.
3. Nonverbal Communication in the Class: Students’ Perspectives, Journal of
Language and Literature, 5(3), 2014, ISSN: 2078-0303, DOI:
10.7813/jll.2014/5-3/60.
4. Questioning Power of the Students in the Class, Journal of Language and
Teaching Research, 4(12), 2014, ISSN 1799-2591. © 2014 ACADEMY
PUBLISHER Manufactured in Finland. doi:10.4304/tpls.4.12.2581-2587
5. Students’ Problems in Answering the TOEFL Test, Theory and Practice in
Language Studies, 6(1), 2015, by ACADEMY PUBLICATION
Manufactured in Finland. doi:10.4304/tpls.4.12.2581-2587.
6. Gender Differences in English Language Teaching, ASIAN EFL Journal,
Indonesian Conference Paper, Volume 4, December 2016.
7. Students’ Expectations toward Their Teachers: A Study on Teachers’
Competence, Gender Issues and Politeness between Teachers and Students in
Indonesian Context, Journal of ELT Worldwide, 2(1), 2015, State University
of Makassar. http://www.ojs.unm.ac.id/index.php/ELT.
8. Framing Indonesian Realities: Essays in Symbolic Anthropology in Honor of
Reimar Schefold, Book review at TAPJA (the Asia Pacific Journal of
Anthropology), RSPAS, the Australian National University, Canberra,
Australia.
She actively participates as editor of the following work:
1. Journal of Performance, English Education Department, Faculty of
Language and Literature, State University of Makassar.
2. Proceeding of International Conference on Language Education I, 23-24
November 2009, hosted by Language Center of the State University of
Makassar.
3. Proceeding of International Conference on Language Education II, 3-4
Desember 2010, hosted by Language Center of the State University of
Makassar.
4. Proceeding of International Conference on Education (ICE), 22-23 Juli 2011,
hosted by the Graduate Program of the State University of Makassar.
5. Proceeding of National Seminar on Gender, 27 January 2011, held by
Women Studies Centre, State University of Makassar.
She also actively participates in seminars and conferences as presenters.
Some of her papers had been presented at
1. Women Studies Centre, STAIN Parepare, 2005;
2. Anthropology Joint Seminar and the Seminar of Language and Linguistics,
The Australian National University, 2006;
10
3. Konferensi International Linguistik Tahunan, (KOLITA) 7, UNIKA Atma
Jaya, Jakarta, 27-
11
She was awarded Professor of Anthropology Linguistics by Directorate of
Higher Education (DIKTI), 1 October 2014 and had her inauguration speech on
18 March 2015.
12
The writing of this hook is inspired by he need
Prof. Murni Mahmud, S.Pd, to provide appropriate hooks in the course of
M.Hum, Ph.D was born in a Discourse Analysis. The fact is that this course
smalt village named Pakkang, is an important part of linguistic field of study.
District of Segeri, Pangkep This course becomes the main subject studied by
Regency, on 26 November 1973. university students in all le\ els. in undergraduate
She has pt&Bshed a book degree, in m aster degree, and in the doctorate
entitled Bahasa dan Gender degree. In addition. Discourse Analysis is now
dalam Masyarakat Bugis(2008).
a trending method in doing research, especially
Another book is Politeness in
in qualitative research. Many researchers have
Bugis: A Study in Linguistic been using this method in data analysis, besides
Anthropology (Volume I and II)
the use of quasi-experimental design.
(2010). Her novel entitled Sang
Etnograf hasbeen recently The main intention in writing this book is tol
published (2016).Her articles explore the theoretical background of Discourse]
have been published in scientific Analysis as a branch of study in linguistics,
journals.She was awarded attempt as well to examine the methods used ini
Professor of Anthropology doing Discourse Analysis, and later to give exercisesj
Linguistics by Directorate of for students in doing Discourse Analysis. Thi
Higher Education (DIKTt), 1 book can become a good reference for student
October 2014 and had her in doing Discourse Analysis.
inauguration speech on 18
March 2015. The A uthoi
ISBN 978-602-61718-9-4
PH L N 1X
PUBLISHER