What’s on the left?

Discourse structure is investigated from the point of view of topic shifts. The paper focuses on the French adverb autrement, an important tool in such operations. It requires an antecedent, the topic to be shifted, which it generally finds among salient elements such as topicalized noun phrases or...

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Main Author: Paul Isambert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Caen 2011-07-01
Series:Discours
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/discours/8423
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author Paul Isambert
author_facet Paul Isambert
author_sort Paul Isambert
collection DOAJ
description Discourse structure is investigated from the point of view of topic shifts. The paper focuses on the French adverb autrement, an important tool in such operations. It requires an antecedent, the topic to be shifted, which it generally finds among salient elements such as topicalized noun phrases or frames. However, since there might be several such elements in the left context, other devices are used to ensure that interlocutors clearly understand which topic is being shifted, i.e. what the antecedent of autrement is. These devices are mostly: stating the new topic, which is similar in many respects (syntax, semantics) to the previous one; the repetition of an overarching topic is also an important way to clarify discourse structure. In cases where such markers are absent, it is hypothesized that topics exist at least covertly. On the whole, discourse structure, and especially the left context, must be highly organized if autrement is to work properly. Thus, the study of autrement offers an interesting perspective on discourse structure as a whole, including the Right Frontier constraint: not only does autrement find its antecedent on the Right Frontier, it also shapes it by closing topics and modifying the availability of discourse referents.
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spelling doaj-art-da18b1984445412ea808c1a16d0a10622025-01-30T09:52:40ZengPresses universitaires de CaenDiscours1963-17232011-07-01810.4000/discours.8423What’s on the left?Paul IsambertDiscourse structure is investigated from the point of view of topic shifts. The paper focuses on the French adverb autrement, an important tool in such operations. It requires an antecedent, the topic to be shifted, which it generally finds among salient elements such as topicalized noun phrases or frames. However, since there might be several such elements in the left context, other devices are used to ensure that interlocutors clearly understand which topic is being shifted, i.e. what the antecedent of autrement is. These devices are mostly: stating the new topic, which is similar in many respects (syntax, semantics) to the previous one; the repetition of an overarching topic is also an important way to clarify discourse structure. In cases where such markers are absent, it is hypothesized that topics exist at least covertly. On the whole, discourse structure, and especially the left context, must be highly organized if autrement is to work properly. Thus, the study of autrement offers an interesting perspective on discourse structure as a whole, including the Right Frontier constraint: not only does autrement find its antecedent on the Right Frontier, it also shapes it by closing topics and modifying the availability of discourse referents.https://journals.openedition.org/discours/8423discourse structureautrementtopicsanaphorRight Frontier
spellingShingle Paul Isambert
What’s on the left?
Discours
discourse structure
autrement
topics
anaphor
Right Frontier
title What’s on the left?
title_full What’s on the left?
title_fullStr What’s on the left?
title_full_unstemmed What’s on the left?
title_short What’s on the left?
title_sort what s on the left
topic discourse structure
autrement
topics
anaphor
Right Frontier
url https://journals.openedition.org/discours/8423
work_keys_str_mv AT paulisambert whatsontheleft