Page 222 - Silence in Intercultural Communication
P. 222

References






             Adams, P., Heaton, B. and Howarth, P. (eds). 1991. Socio-Cultural Issues in English for Academic
                Purposes. London: Macmillan.
             Agar, M. H. 1980. The Professional Stranger. New York: Academic Press.
             Agar, M. H. 1998. Language Shock. New York: William Morrow.
             Agyekum, K. 2002. “The communicative role of silence in Akan.” Pragmatics 12 (1): 31–52.
             Allen, C. 1978. “Failures of word, uses of silence: Djuna Barnes, Adrienne Rich, and Margaret
                Atwood.” Regionalism and the Female Imagination 4 (1): 1–7.
             Anderson, F. E. 1992. “The enigma of the college classroom: Nails that don’t stick up.” In A
                Handbook for Teaching English at Japanese Colleges and Universities, P. Wadden (ed.),
                101–110. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
             Argyle, M. 1972. The Psychology of Interpersonal Behaviour. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
             Asaoka, T. 1987. “Communication problems between Japanese and Australians at a dinner par-
                ty.” Working Papers of the Japanese Studies Centre (3). Melbourne: Monash University.
             Atkinson, J. and Heritage, J. 1984. “Transcription notation.” In Structures of Social Interaction:
                Studies in conversation analysis, J. Atkinson and J. Heritage (eds), ix–xvi. Cambridge: Cam-
                bridge University Press.
             Atkinson, J. M. and Heritage, J. (eds). 1984. Structures of Social Action: Studies in conversation
                analysis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
             Ballard,  B.  1996.  “Through  language  to  learning:  Preparing  overseas  students  for  study  in
                Western universities.” In Society and the Language Classroom, H. Coleman (ed.), 148–168.
                Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
             Ballard, B. and Clanchy, J. 1991. Teaching Students from Overseas. Melbourne: Longman
                Cheshire.
             Barnlund, D. C. 1975. Public and Private Self in Japan and the US. Tokyo: Simul Press.
             Bartlett, F. C. 1932. Remembering. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
             Barnett, M. A. 1989. More than Meets the Eye: Foreign language reading theory and practice.
                Englewood Cliffs, NJ: CAL & Prentice Hall.
             Basso, K. H. 1972. “‘To give up on words’: Silence in Western Apache culture.” In Language and
                Social Context, P. P. Giglioli (ed.), 67–86. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
             Bateson, G. 1972. Steps to an Ecology of Mind. New York: Ballantine.
             Beach, W. 1993. “Transitional regularities for ‘casual’ “Okay” usages.” Journal of Pragmatics 19
                (4): 325–352.
             Beebe, L. M. and Takahashi, T. 1989. “Sociolinguistic variation in face-threatening speech
                acts: Chastisement and disagreement.” In The Dynamic Interlanguage, M. Eisenstein
                (ed.), 199–218. New York: Plenum.
             Berg, B. L. 1998. Qualitative Research Methods for Social Sciences. Needham Heights, MA:
                Viacom Company.
   217   218   219   220   221   222   223   224   225   226   227