Beyond relational work: a psycho-pragmatic analysis of impoliteness in Shakespeare’s King Lear

Abstract This paper offers a psycho-pragmatic analysis of impoliteness in Shakespeare’s King Lear at the intradiegetic level of communication. The paper’s main objective is to explore the extent to which impoliteness assessment is influenced by both the psychological traits of interlocutors motivate...

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Main Author: Ayman Khafaga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2023-08-01
Series:Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-023-02039-5
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author Ayman Khafaga
author_facet Ayman Khafaga
author_sort Ayman Khafaga
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description Abstract This paper offers a psycho-pragmatic analysis of impoliteness in Shakespeare’s King Lear at the intradiegetic level of communication. The paper’s main objective is to explore the extent to which impoliteness assessment is influenced by both the psychological traits of interlocutors motivated by their reality paradigms and the fictional participation of discourse participants, which targets a deeper understanding of the association between impoliteness, psychological dimensions of personality, and fictional participation in drama dialogue. The study is based on an eclectic framework by drawing inspiration from contributions in the field of impoliteness and relational work studies, with a special emphasis on Locher and Jucker’s (2021) list of the factors influencing relational work, together with reference to studies on the relationship between psychological dimensions of personality and language use, with a focus on Archer’s (2002) concept of reality paradigms. The paper has two main findings: first, psychological traits of interlocutors contribute significantly to the production, reception, and assessment of impoliteness and serve as antecedents of their verbal aggression; and, second, psychological impoliteness operates within a specific community of practice and has its own context-specific expectation frames.
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spelling doaj.art-03d5c814723a45fd97cb09aba50e7a962023-11-26T12:38:55ZengSpringer NatureHumanities & Social Sciences Communications2662-99922023-08-0110111310.1057/s41599-023-02039-5Beyond relational work: a psycho-pragmatic analysis of impoliteness in Shakespeare’s King LearAyman Khafaga0College of Science and Humanities, Prince Sattam bin Abdulaziz UniversityAbstract This paper offers a psycho-pragmatic analysis of impoliteness in Shakespeare’s King Lear at the intradiegetic level of communication. The paper’s main objective is to explore the extent to which impoliteness assessment is influenced by both the psychological traits of interlocutors motivated by their reality paradigms and the fictional participation of discourse participants, which targets a deeper understanding of the association between impoliteness, psychological dimensions of personality, and fictional participation in drama dialogue. The study is based on an eclectic framework by drawing inspiration from contributions in the field of impoliteness and relational work studies, with a special emphasis on Locher and Jucker’s (2021) list of the factors influencing relational work, together with reference to studies on the relationship between psychological dimensions of personality and language use, with a focus on Archer’s (2002) concept of reality paradigms. The paper has two main findings: first, psychological traits of interlocutors contribute significantly to the production, reception, and assessment of impoliteness and serve as antecedents of their verbal aggression; and, second, psychological impoliteness operates within a specific community of practice and has its own context-specific expectation frames.https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-023-02039-5
spellingShingle Ayman Khafaga
Beyond relational work: a psycho-pragmatic analysis of impoliteness in Shakespeare’s King Lear
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
title Beyond relational work: a psycho-pragmatic analysis of impoliteness in Shakespeare’s King Lear
title_full Beyond relational work: a psycho-pragmatic analysis of impoliteness in Shakespeare’s King Lear
title_fullStr Beyond relational work: a psycho-pragmatic analysis of impoliteness in Shakespeare’s King Lear
title_full_unstemmed Beyond relational work: a psycho-pragmatic analysis of impoliteness in Shakespeare’s King Lear
title_short Beyond relational work: a psycho-pragmatic analysis of impoliteness in Shakespeare’s King Lear
title_sort beyond relational work a psycho pragmatic analysis of impoliteness in shakespeare s king lear
url https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-023-02039-5
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