Mitigation Strategies in Colloquial Conversations: a Contrastive Approach in European, Cuban, Mexican, Argentinian and Chilean Spanish

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Název: Mitigation Strategies in Colloquial Conversations: a Contrastive Approach in European, Cuban, Mexican, Argentinian and Chilean Spanish
Autoři: Marta Albelda Marco
Zdroj: Contrastive Pragmatics. 6:120-153
Informace o vydavateli: Walter de Gruyter GmbH, 2025.
Rok vydání: 2025
Témata: 0602 languages and literature, 05 social sciences, 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences, 06 humanities and the arts
Popis: This paper compares the pragmatic mitigation strategies used by speakers of five geographic varieties of Spanish: European, Cuban, Mexican, Argentinian and Chilean Spanish. Mitigation can be understood as a pragmatic strategy arising from face-protection needs that seeks to reduce possible adverse effects on the satisfactory progress of communication. The data are drawn from the Ameresco corpus of colloquial conversations, and the analysis includes four kinds of parameters: linguistic, pragmatic, and socio-situational. The study explores the functions and frequency of use of mitigation, speakers’ and hearers’ exposure to social and relational risks, the degree of their commitment in interaction, and the most productive resources observed in each variety. The results show convergences and divergences in the use of mitigation in these geographical areas, providing a picture of dialectal and sociolectal patterns here. The study concludes that mitigation varies according to the priorities of face needs in each speech community.
Druh dokumentu: Article
ISSN: 2666-0393
2666-0385
DOI: 10.1163/26660393-bja10087
Rights: CC BY
Přístupové číslo: edsair.doi...........3fc1cfc1cbbd1ef65947bc64fa5fc9b3
Databáze: OpenAIRE
Popis
Abstrakt:This paper compares the pragmatic mitigation strategies used by speakers of five geographic varieties of Spanish: European, Cuban, Mexican, Argentinian and Chilean Spanish. Mitigation can be understood as a pragmatic strategy arising from face-protection needs that seeks to reduce possible adverse effects on the satisfactory progress of communication. The data are drawn from the Ameresco corpus of colloquial conversations, and the analysis includes four kinds of parameters: linguistic, pragmatic, and socio-situational. The study explores the functions and frequency of use of mitigation, speakers’ and hearers’ exposure to social and relational risks, the degree of their commitment in interaction, and the most productive resources observed in each variety. The results show convergences and divergences in the use of mitigation in these geographical areas, providing a picture of dialectal and sociolectal patterns here. The study concludes that mitigation varies according to the priorities of face needs in each speech community.
ISSN:26660393
26660385
DOI:10.1163/26660393-bja10087