Font Size: a A A

A Study On Conversation Of Job-hunting Reality Television

Posted on:2015-03-05Degree:MasterType:Thesis
Country:ChinaCandidate:G Q WangFull Text:PDF
GTID:2285330467956897Subject:Linguistics and Applied Linguistics
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
Jobs Come Jobs Go is behalf of Chinese job-hunting realitytelevision currently. It is widely welcomed by people with its innovativecontent and mature model. On the current, the academic analyze suchprograms mainly from journalism and communication, sociology,narratology and marketing. The academic analyze the causes of them withhigh ratings, explain the current development and future developmentpaths, raise the problems and methods to solve. Few scholars analyze theconversation among interviewers, interviewees, hosts in ChineseJob-hunting Reality Television from the perspective of linguistics.This thesis consists of four parts. The first part is an introduction,which describes an overview of job-hunting reality television, as well asthe research perspective and methods of the full text. The second partanalyzes turn-taking system in Jobs Come Jobs Go with the instances. Onthe one hand, it analyzes the composition form of turn from a singlesentence, complex sentences and sentence group; On the other hand, itanalyzes the speaker-specifying model and hearer-selected model, and summarizes the turn-taking means. The third part discusses answer typesand answer forms in Jobs Come Jobs Go with the instances, so as to graspthe internal structure of conversation in the context. The fourth partsummarizes participants’ conversational strategies according to thecorpus of Jobs Come Jobs Go.This thesis combines description with interpretation. It describes theconversational constructed ways and summarizes conversationalconstructed features. Meanwhile, it also explains the reasons foremergence of these conversational constructed ways and conversationalconstructed features.
Keywords/Search Tags:job-hunting reality television, conversation analysis, turn-taking, answer, conversational strategies
PDF Full Text Request
Related items