This volume looks at politeness phenomena in a culture and country that
is becoming the most influential in the world. It is the first book to
survey politeness variations across different genres in Chinese and
fills a gap in both politeness research in general and in Chinese
politeness research in particular.
Unlike existing studies which treat Chinese politeness phenomena as
non-varying this study provides systemic evidence for how linguistic
polite behaviour varies across genres in China. These intracultural
variations which are investigated in the volume include addressing,
backchanneling, identity construction and rapport management which are
subject to the influence of genre differences such as formality of
occasion, media and channel of communication, presence or absence of
interlocutor or third party and role-configurations. The volume offers
those who read or write Chinese texts or engage in Chinese conversation
an enriched knowledge of how politeness as the most important type of
interpersonal meaning is communicated in different genres in that
language.