There is growing acceptance among pragmaticians that identity is often
(de)constructed and negotiated in communication in order to impact the
outcome of the interaction. Filling an important gap in current
research, this book offers the first systematic, pragmatic theory to
account for the generative mechanisms of identity in communication.
Using data drawn from real-life communicative contexts in China, Xinren
Chen examines why identity strategies are adopted, how and why
identities are constructed and what factors determine their
appropriateness and effectiveness. In answering these questions, this
book argues that identity is an essential communicative resource,
present across various domains and able to be exploited to facilitate
the realization of communicative needs. Demonstrating that communication
in Chinese involves the dynamic choice and shift of identity by
discursive means, Exploring Identity Work in Chinese Communication
suggests that identity is intersubjective in communication in all
languages and that it can be accepted, challenged, or even
deconstructed.