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  2. Discourse community - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discourse_community

    A discourse community is a group of people who share a set of discourses, understood as basic values and assumptions, and ways of communicating about those goals.Linguist John Swales defined discourse communities as "groups that have goals or purposes, and use communication to achieve these goals."

  3. Knowledge community - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knowledge_community

    A knowledge community is a community construct, stemming from the convergence of knowledge management as a field of study and social exchange theory.Formerly known as a discourse community and having evolved from forums and web forums, knowledge communities are now often referred to as a community of practice or virtual community of practice.

  4. Foucauldian discourse analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foucauldian_discourse_analysis

    These procedures are exercised from the outside and function as systems of exclusion, insofar as they concern the part of the discourse that puts power and desire into play. The three great systems of this type are: the prohibited word, the division of madness and the will to truth. [9] Prohibition: definition of what can be said in each ...

  5. Language planning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_planning

    In sociolinguistics, language planning (also known as language engineering) is a deliberate effort to influence the function, structure or acquisition of languages or language varieties within a speech community. [1]

  6. John Swales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Swales

    John Malcolm Swales (born 1938) is a linguist best known for his work on genre analysis, particularly with regard to its application to the fields of rhetoric, discourse analysis, English for Academic Purposes and, more recently, information science. His writing has studied second language acquisition.

  7. Open discourse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_discourse

    Open discourse as living document may also be understood as the open-endedness in both a communication event and the inability to collapse a communication event into definitives, the unequivocal import of a cultural artifact and the associated inability to resolve ambiguity due to noise and ever-changing context and audience, as Graham (2000: p.

  8. Speech community - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_community

    A speech community is a group of people who share a set of linguistic norms and expectations regarding the use of language. [1] The concept is mostly associated with sociolinguistics and anthropological linguistics. Exactly how to define speech community is debated in the literature. Definitions of speech community tend to involve varying ...

  9. Public rhetoric - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_rhetoric

    A public, not to be confused with the public, is composed of members that address each other, are addressed as a group, and also subscribe to specific ideals.Michael Warner describes a public as "being self-organized, …a relationship among strangers …[where] merely paying attention can be enough to make [one] a member."