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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Politeness in compliment responses: A perspective from naturally occurring exchanges in Turkish

Şükriye Ruhi
- 01 Jan 2006 - 
- Vol. 16, Iss: 1, pp 43-101
TLDR
The authors analyzed a corpus of compliment responses in Turkish according to the conversational maxim approach (Leech 1983, 2003) and the face-management approach (Brown and Levinson 1987) with a view to extending the conceptualisation of self-presentation in theorising on politeness.
Abstract
This paper analyses a corpus of compliment responses in Turkish according to the conversational maxim approach (Leech 1983, 2003) and the face-management approach (Brown and Levinson 1987) with a view to extending the conceptualisation of self-presentation in theorising on politeness. It observes that the two theories ground politeness on consideration for alter and give precedence to politeness in the sense of displaying deference and solidarity at the expense of self-politeness, described in the present study as speaker need for display of competence, self-confidence, and individuality in interaction, besides the need for non-imposition. Regarding the maxim approach, the paper argues that conversational implicatures triggered by a variety of responses ultimately tie to the Tact Maxim and more specifically to the Sympathy Maxim in the Turkish context. The analysis reveals that compliment responses may override the Politeness Principle, that self-presentational concerns are crucial motivating factors, and that face concerns need to be incorporated into the model. From the perspective of the face-management approach, the study supports the claim in O’Driscoll (1996) and Spencer-Oatey (2000) that the notions of positive and negative face as need for community and autonomy need to be disentangled from the theory’s conceptualisation of face as public self-image. With the incorporation of a number of self-politeness strategies, the face-theoretic analysis builds on this distinction and integrates it with the concept of interactional imbalance by extending an analytic framework adapted from Bayraktaroglu (1991). The paper concludes with suggestions on how the two theories may complement each other.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Responding to compliments in Chinese: Has it changed?

TL;DR: This paper reported on a quasi-longitudinal study of Chinese compliment responses and found that instead of overwhelmingly rejecting compliments as reported in Chen (1993), Xi'an Chinese accept compliments as much as do speakers of many Western languages such as English and German.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emic conceptualisations of (im)politeness and face in Japanese: Implications for the discursive negotiation of second language learner identities

TL;DR: This paper argued that learners of Japanese are to learn how to successfully manage these various dilemmas, they need to acquire a more emicallygrounding understanding of the various dimensions that can influence or be influenced by their second language identities.
Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of globalisation on politeness and impoliteness

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider if and to what extent globalisation affects the expression of politeness and impoliteness and draw their evidence from the service sector, primarily in Greece and in England.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conceptualizing face and relational work in (im)politeness : Revelations from politeness lexemes and idioms in Turkish

TL;DR: In this article, the conceptualization of face and related aspects of self in Turkish, and the implications of the conceptualisation of face in interaction in Turkish for understanding relational work at the emic and the etic levels are discussed.

Greetings and Politeness in Doctor-Client Encounters in Southwestern Nigeria

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors unpack the discursive elements that characterize interactive confluence and divergence in selected consultative encounters in the hospitals and find that institutional and cultural (dis)alignments occur in respect of adjacency and non-adjacency pair greetings.
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Logic and conversation

H. P. Grice
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