SPEAKING model of speech events

E530445

The SPEAKING model of speech events is Dell Hymes’s influential ethnographic framework that analyzes communicative situations through components like setting, participants, ends, act sequence, key, instrumentalities, norms, and genre.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
SPEAKING model of speech events canonical 1

Statements (50)

Predicate Object
instanceOf communication model
ethnographic framework
model of speech events
theoretical framework in linguistic anthropology
acronymFor Setting and Scene, Participants, Ends, Act sequence, Key, Instrumentalities, Norms, Genre
analyzes communicative situations
speech events
appliesTo everyday conversation
face-to-face interaction
institutional discourse
narrative performance
ritual speech
classificationCriterion channels and codes of communication
form and sequence of acts
genre of communicative event
goals of communication
norms of interaction and interpretation
participants’ roles
situational features of speech
tone or manner of speech
component Act sequence
Ends
Genre
Instrumentalities
Key
Norms
Participants
Setting and Scene
creator Dell Hymes NERFINISHED
developedBy Dell Hymes NERFINISHED
emphasizes cultural norms of communication
relationship between language and culture
situational factors in language use
field ethnography of communication
linguistic anthropology
sociolinguistics NERFINISHED
focusesOn context of communication
social meaning of speech
goal to provide a systematic description of speech events
influenced communication ethnography methods
later models of discourse analysis
perspective contextual view of language use
functional view of language
relatedConcept communicative competence
speech community
theoreticalBasis ethnography of speaking
usedIn discourse analysis
ethnographic analysis of discourse
intercultural communication studies
pragmatics

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Dell Hymes theory SPEAKING model of speech events