Dangerous politeness? Understandings of politeness in the COVID-19 era and beyond

IF 1.4 2区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
Maria Sifianou
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract What (im)politeness means changes over time. As these changes are usually gradual, we tend to be relatively unaware of them. However, when changes are abrupt, people not only notice but are also concerned with them. The COVID-19 pandemic entailed such abrupt changes involving new rules most of which are at odds with the rather automatic conventions of politeness that we follow. My aim in this paper is to explore what politeness means to non-academics in the context of the pandemic and how similar or different their understandings are from academic accounts. To this end, I will draw from an online article entitled “Your politeness is a public health hazard”, which appeared at the onset of the pandemic, and the user-generated comments it triggered. The discussion is placed within the discursive turn in (im)politeness research, considering its key distinction between first-order and second-order conceptualisations of politeness. The findings suggest that politeness in the pandemic is still mostly understood as consideration for the other, an understanding shared with (im)politeness research. However, posters’ views are broader overlapping with understandings of ‘civility’. These views manifest their knowledge as observers and participants of social reality but also reveal that they are in dialogue with work in philosophy, sociology and psychology.
危险的礼貌?新冠肺炎时代及其后对礼貌的理解
礼貌的含义随着时间的推移而变化。由于这些变化通常是渐进的,我们往往相对没有意识到它们。然而,当变化突然发生时,人们不仅会注意到,而且会关心它们。新冠肺炎大流行带来了如此突然的变化,涉及新规则,其中大多数与我们遵循的相当自动的礼貌惯例不一致。我在这篇论文中的目的是探讨在疫情背景下,礼貌对非学者意味着什么,以及他们的理解与学术报道有多相似或不同。为此,我将引用一篇题为“你的礼貌是对公共健康的危害”的在线文章,该文章出现在疫情爆发时,并引发了用户的评论。考虑到礼貌的一阶和二阶概念之间的关键区别,本文将讨论置于礼貌研究的话语转向中。研究结果表明,疫情中的礼貌仍然主要被理解为对他人的考虑,这一理解与(im)礼貌研究相同。然而,海报的观点与对“文明”的理解有着更广泛的重叠。这些观点体现了他们作为社会现实的观察者和参与者的知识,但也揭示了他们与哲学、社会学和心理学的工作对话。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
30.00%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: The Journal of Politeness Research responds to the urgent need to provide an international forum for the discussion of all aspects of politeness as a complex linguistic and non-linguistic phenomenon. Politeness has interested researchers in fields of academic activity as diverse as business studies, foreign language teaching, developmental psychology, social psychology, sociolinguistics, linguistic pragmatics, social anthropology, cultural studies, sociology, communication studies, and gender studies. The journal provides an outlet through which researchers on politeness phenomena from these diverse fields of interest may publish their findings and where it will be possible to keep up to date with the wide range of research published in this expanding field.
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