Abstract

1. Acknowledgements 2. About the Authors 3. Introduction: Views of Coherence (by Bublitz, Wolfram) 4. Part I: How to (Re-)Create Coherence: Means of Coherence 5. Coherent Voicing: On Prosody in Conversational Reported Speech (by Couper-Kuhlen, Elizabeth) 6. It Takes Two to Cohere: The Collaborative Dimension of Topical Coherence in Conversation (by Geluykens, Ronald) 7. Learning to Cohere: Causal Links in Native vs. Non-Native Argumentative Writing (by Lorenz, Gunter) 8. Coherence through Understanding through Discourse Patterns: Focus on News Reports (by Ostman, Jan-Ola) 9. Semiotic Spanning at Conferences: Cohesion and Coherence in and across Conference Papers and their Discussions (by Ventola, Eija) 10. Coherent Keying in Conversational Humour: Contextualising Joint Fictionalisation (by Kotthoff, Helga) 11. Part II: How to Negotiate Coherence: Degrees of Coherence 12. Disturbed Coherence: 'Fill me in' (by Bublitz, Wolfram) 13. Coherence and Misunderstanding in Everyday Conversations (by Bazzanella, Carla) 14. The Effect of Context in the Definition and Negotiation of Coherence (by Ciliberti, Anna) 15. Coherence in Summary: The Contexts of Appropriate Discourse (by Seidlhofer, Barbara) 16. Coherence in Hypertext (by Fritz, Gerd) 17. Part III: How to describe Coherence: Views of Coherence 18. Communicative Intentions and Coherence Relations (by Sanders, Ted) 19. If Coherence Is Achieved, Then Where Doth Meaning Lie? (by Edmondson, Willis J.) 20. A Bibliography of Coherence and Cohesion (by Lenk, Uta) 21. Index

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