Request strategies in Korean

This study examines the speech act of request in Korean. The methodology adapts the principles used by the Cross-Cultural Speech Act Realization Project (CCSARP, Blum-Kulka et al, 1989), but a slightly modified version of its coding system is used in order to suit the Korean language. Data has been...

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Main Authors: Rue, Yong Ju, Zhang, Grace, Shin, Kyu
Format: Conference Paper
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31881
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author Rue, Yong Ju
Zhang, Grace
Shin, Kyu
author_facet Rue, Yong Ju
Zhang, Grace
Shin, Kyu
author_sort Rue, Yong Ju
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This study examines the speech act of request in Korean. The methodology adapts the principles used by the Cross-Cultural Speech Act Realization Project (CCSARP, Blum-Kulka et al, 1989), but a slightly modified version of its coding system is used in order to suit the Korean language. Data has been collected in a workplace setting, through video-taping of role-plays. In the recording of the role-platys, three role-play scenarios were performed by Korean participants who were working at medium-sized companies with white-collar environments.The study shows that Korean request strategies are chosen primarily according to power status, the higher the power status of the addressee, the more indirect request strategy is preferred. Korean speakers appear to be more indirect to the addressees who are superiors and equal work members than to juniors. Another discovery, hardly explored in previous studies, is that hints are used extensively in this study and corresponding to the level of power ranks as well: the lower power rank of the addressee, the less preference of strong hint is displayed.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-318812017-01-30T13:27:56Z Request strategies in Korean Rue, Yong Ju Zhang, Grace Shin, Kyu Korean request strategies role-plays conversation analysis This study examines the speech act of request in Korean. The methodology adapts the principles used by the Cross-Cultural Speech Act Realization Project (CCSARP, Blum-Kulka et al, 1989), but a slightly modified version of its coding system is used in order to suit the Korean language. Data has been collected in a workplace setting, through video-taping of role-plays. In the recording of the role-platys, three role-play scenarios were performed by Korean participants who were working at medium-sized companies with white-collar environments.The study shows that Korean request strategies are chosen primarily according to power status, the higher the power status of the addressee, the more indirect request strategy is preferred. Korean speakers appear to be more indirect to the addressees who are superiors and equal work members than to juniors. Another discovery, hardly explored in previous studies, is that hints are used extensively in this study and corresponding to the level of power ranks as well: the lower power rank of the addressee, the less preference of strong hint is displayed. 2007 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31881 fulltext
spellingShingle Korean
request strategies
role-plays
conversation analysis
Rue, Yong Ju
Zhang, Grace
Shin, Kyu
Request strategies in Korean
title Request strategies in Korean
title_full Request strategies in Korean
title_fullStr Request strategies in Korean
title_full_unstemmed Request strategies in Korean
title_short Request strategies in Korean
title_sort request strategies in korean
topic Korean
request strategies
role-plays
conversation analysis
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31881