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@inbook{838522, author = {Chovanec, Jan}, address = {Hershey, PA}, booktitle = {Leonard Shedletsky and Joan E. Aitken (eds.) Cases on Online Discussion and Interaction: Experiences and Outcomes}, edition = {1.}, keywords = {live text; commentary; virtual identity; male gossip; sports reporting; dialogic interaction; synthetic personalization; live blogging; blogs}, howpublished = {tištěná verze "print"}, language = {eng}, location = {Hershey, PA}, isbn = {978-1-61520-863-0}, pages = {234-251}, publisher = {IGI Global}, title = {Online Discussion and Interaction: The Case of Live Text Commentary}, url = {http://www.igi-global.com/bookstore/Chapter.aspx?TitleId=43667}, year = {2010} }
TY - CHAP ID - 838522 AU - Chovanec, Jan PY - 2010 TI - Online Discussion and Interaction: The Case of Live Text Commentary VL - Neuveden PB - IGI Global CY - Hershey, PA SN - 9781615208630 KW - live text KW - commentary KW - virtual identity KW - male gossip KW - sports reporting KW - dialogic interaction KW - synthetic personalization KW - live blogging KW - blogs UR - http://www.igi-global.com/bookstore/Chapter.aspx?TitleId=43667 N2 - This contribution discusses linguistic aspects of discussion and interaction in a new genre of journalism - live text commentary - that has recently come into existence thanks to new communication technologies, most notably the Internet. Live text commentary is a professional journalistic text that is produced online contemporaneously with the event that it describes. The technology enables the text's consumers to provide instant feedback to the author, thus enhancing interpersonal interaction. Structurally, the resulting texts contain elements of discussion because readers' comments are used to co-construct the texts, while also manifesting numerous linguistic features of reader-oriented interactiveness. Live text commentary is viewed as an instance of mediated quasi-interaction. This is because the readers interact in a virtual space, discursively enacting their membership in an imaginary community, rather than participating in a real interpersonal interaction. Using material from live text commentaries of sports events, this contribution provides an analysis of such online discussion and interaction from the perspective of discourse analysis and sociolinguistics. ER -
CHOVANEC, Jan. Online Discussion and Interaction: The Case of Live Text Commentary. In \textit{Leonard Shedletsky and Joan E. Aitken (eds.) Cases on Online Discussion and Interaction: Experiences and Outcomes}. 1st ed. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2010, p.~234-251, 23 pp. ISBN~978-1-61520-863-0.
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