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Wallace Chafe [14]Wallace L. Chafe [8]
  1. Discourse, Consciousness, and Time: The Flow and Displacement of Conscious Experience in Speaking and Writing.Wallace Chafe - 1994 - University of Chicago Press.
    This work offers a comprehensive picture of the dynamic natures of language and consciousness that will interest linguists, psychologists, literary scholars,...
  2.  66
    The Pear Stories: Cognitive, Cultural, and Linguistic Aspects of Narrative Production.Wallace L. Chafe (ed.) - 1980 - Ablex.
  3. Evidentiality: the linguistic coding of epistemology.Wallace L. Chafe & Johanna Nichols (eds.) - 1986 - Norwood, N.J.: Ablex.
  4. The deployment of consciousness in the construction of narrative.Wallace L. Chafe - 1980 - In The Pear Stories: Cognitive, Cultural, and Linguistic Aspects of Narrative Production. Ablex.
  5. Language and consciousness.Wallace L. Chafe - 2007 - In Philip David Zelazo, Morris Moscovitch & Evan Thompson (eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Consciousness. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  6. 1986.Wallace Chafe & Johanna Nichols - 1986 - In Wallace L. Chafe & Johanna Nichols (eds.), Evidentiality: The Linguistic Coding of Epistemology. Ablex.
     
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  7. and Academic Writing.Wallace Chafe - 1986 - In Wallace L. Chafe & Johanna Nichols (eds.), Evidentiality: The Linguistic Coding of Epistemology. Ablex. pp. 261.
  8.  81
    Idiomaticity as an Anomaly in the Chomskyan Paradigm.Wallace L. Chafe - 1968 - Foundations of Language 4 (2):109-127.
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  9.  50
    How consciousness shapes language.Wallace Chafe - 1996 - Pragmatics and Cognition 4 (1):35-54.
    I begin by distinguishing constant properties of consciousness from variable properties . Foci of active consciousness are seen as reflected in language in intonation units. Within them, ideas are expressed differently depending on their activation cost, characterizable in terms of given, accessible, or new information. By hypothesizing that each focus of consciousness is limited to one new idea, it is possible to achieve a clearer understanding of lexicalization and related phenomena. Coherent chunks of semiactive information are reflected in language as (...)
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  10.  87
    A linguist's perspective on William James and "the stream of thought.".Wallace Chafe - 2000 - Consciousness and Cognition 9 (4):618-628.
  11.  13
    How consciousness shapes language.Wallace Chafe - 1996 - Pragmatics and Cognition 4 (1):35-54.
    I begin by distinguishing constant properties of consciousness from variable properties. Foci of active consciousness are seen as reflected in language in intonation units. Within them, ideas are expressed differently depending on their activation cost, characterizable in terms of given, accessible, or new information. By hypothesizing that each focus of consciousness is limited to one new idea, it is possible to achieve a clearer understanding of lexicalization and related phenomena. Coherent chunks of semiactive information are reflected in language as discourse (...)
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  12. Alkire, MT, 370.Laurent Auclair, Jodie A. Baird, Kati Balog, Iris R. Bell, Marcia Bernstein, John Bickle, Steven Ravett Brown, Peter Cariani, Wallace Chafe & Ziya V. Dikman - 2000 - Consciousness and Cognition 9:639.
     
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  13.  36
    Comments on Jackendoff, Nuyts, and Allwood.Wallace Chafe - 1996 - Pragmatics and Cognition 4 (1):181-196.
  14. Functional sentence perspective in written and spoken communication by Jan Firbas.Wallace Chafe - 1994 - In Stephen Everson (ed.), Language. Cambridge University Press. pp. 70--350.
     
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  15.  4
    Three approaches to the evaluation of knowledge.Wallace Chafe - 2013 - Discourse Studies 15 (5):501-517.
    What follows is a byproduct of a larger work in progress that tries to show the benefits of a ‘thought-oriented’ linguistics, in contrast to the traditional ‘sound-oriented’ approach. It seems obvious that language begins with thoughts in the mind of a speaker and ends with some facsimile of those thoughts in the mind of a listener. Sounds make this communication possible, but they are not the driving force behind the structure that language takes. Because sounds are accessible to public observation (...)
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  16.  24
    Thought-Based Linguistics: How Languages Turn Thoughts Into Sounds.Wallace Chafe - 2018 - Cambridge University Press.
    The extent to which language is inseparable from thought has long been a major subject of debate across linguistics, psychology, philosophy and other disciplines. In this study, Wallace Chafe presents a thought-based theory of language that goes beyond traditional views that semantics, syntax, and sounds are sufficient to account for language design. Language begins with thoughts in the mind of a speaker and ends by affecting thoughts in the mind of a listener. This obvious observation is seldom incorporated in descriptions (...)
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  17. Discussing Language.H. Parret, Wallace L. Chafe, Noam Chomsky, Algirdas J. Greimas, M. A. K. Halliday & Peter Hartmann - 1979 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 41 (4):717-718.
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  18.  10
    Review of Raskin (2008): The Primer of Humor Research. [REVIEW]Wallace Chafe - 2011 - Pragmatics and Cognition 19 (2):357-365.
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