Clift2006

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Clift2006
BibType ARTICLE
Key Clift2006
Author(s) Rebecca Clift
Title Indexing stance: Reported speech as an interactional evidential
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Epistemics, Reported Speech, Evidentiality, Stance, Deixis, Interaction
Publisher
Year 2006
Language
City
Month
Journal Journal of Sociolinguistics
Volume 10
Number 5
Pages 569-595
URL Link
DOI
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

The notion of linguistic stance as a non-grammaticalized form of evidentiality is here explored through an investigation of reported speech in English interaction. Reported speech is found to be one of a variety of resources with which speakers lay claim to epistemic priority vis-`a-vis recipients. Such resources are not identifiable as stance markers independently of the sequential contexts in which they appear; sequential position is shown to be central in providing at once a constraint on what can be said and a resource to exploit in saying it. Resources dependent on sequential position to index stance are deemed to be interactional evidentials to distinguish them from the well-documented stand-alone evidentials. Interactional and stand-alone evidentials, as forms of deixis, are directed to the orientations of epistemic authority and accountability respectively; their distinct means of marking evidentiality are grounded in the motivation to be explicit with regard to accountability and inexplicit with regard to authority.

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