The affordances and constraints of situation and genre Visual and multimodal rhetoric in unusual traffic signs
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| Publication date | 2018 |
| Journal | International Review of Pragmatics |
| Volume | Issue number | 10 | 2 |
| Pages (from-to) | 158-178 |
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| Abstract |
Visuals are generally considered to be rich in information, but also to be open to many different interpretations. As a consequence, many argumentation scholars doubt that visuals can constitute argumentation (e.g. Fleming, 1996; Johnson, 2003, 2010; Patterson, 2010). In this paper, we argue that the rhetorical and argumentative potential of visuals and multimodal texts is strengthened if they belong to recognizable genres, genres being governed by discourse-internal factors as well as situational/pragmatic understanding.The genre of traffic signs can draw on specific genre conventions thanks to these signs’ highly coded nature. As a consequence, traffic signs constitute an exemplary category to make the point that visuals and multimodal texts can function rhetorically or even argumentatively. We support our claim by first analysing a number of unusual instances of the genre and then discussing a few visual and multimodal signs whose argumentative potential no longer depends on specific traffic-related circumstances but crucially depends on the pretence that they are traffic signs.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1163/18773109-01002002 |
| Other links | http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/18773109/10/2 |
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