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Dominique Maingueneau was born on 1950 in Paris, is a French linguist. Discover Dominique Maingueneau's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 74 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation Linguist, Discourse Analyst
Age 74 years old
Zodiac Sign
Born 1950
Birthday 1950
Birthplace Paris
Nationality Paris

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1950. He is a member of famous with the age 74 years old group.

Dominique Maingueneau Height, Weight & Measurements

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Dominique Maingueneau Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Dominique Maingueneau worth at the age of 74 years old? Dominique Maingueneau’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from Paris. We have estimated Dominique Maingueneau's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Net Worth in 2023 Pending
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Timeline

1870

''Les livres d’école de la République, 1870-1914.

1950

Dominique Maingueneau (born 1950) is a French linguist, emeritus Professor at Sorbonne University (Paris).

His research focuses on discourse analysis.

It associates a pragmatic outlook on discourse with linguistic «enunciation» theories and some aspects of Michel Foucault's line of thought.

1970

Maingueneau studied linguistics and philosophy at the "École Normale Supérieure de Saint-Cloud" (1970-1974) and at the University of Paris 10 (now Paris Nanterre University).

1974

He obtained in 1974 a first PhD ("doctorat de 3° cycle") in linguistics: Building a discursive semantics; he was awarded a second one ("doctorat d’État") in 1979: ''Semantics of controversy.

From discourse to interdiscourse''.

He became lecturer at the University of Amiens (1974), then professor (1988).

1976

In the latter area he has written various handbooks: Initiation aux méthodes de l’analyse du discours (1976), Nouvelles tendances en analyse du discours (1987), Analyser les textes de communication (1998), Discours et analyse du discours (2014).

Initiation aux méthodes de l’analyse du discours, Paris, Hachette, 1976 (Spanish translation : Buenos Aires, Hachette, 1980).

1979

Discours et idéologie'', Paris, Le Sycomore, 1979.

1983

Sémantique de la polémique, Lausanne, l’Age d'Homme, 1983.

1984

Genèses du discours, Bruxelles-Liège, P. Mardaga, 1984 (Portuguese (Brazil) translation : Curitiba, Criar, 2005).

2000

In 2000 he moved to the University of Paris XII; from 2012 to 2019 he was professor of French linguistics and discourse analysis at the Sorbonne.

2002

He was also the co-editor, with P. Charaudeau, of the Dictionnaire d’analyse du discours (2002).

2006

He was a member of the Institut Universitaire de France (2006-2011)..... His books have been translated into thirteen languages.

He has published on French linguistics, and above all on discourse analysis.

2014

With J. Angermuller and R. Wodak he edited The Reader in Discourse Studies: Main currents in Theory and Analysis (2014).

In his view, discourse analysis is only one of the disciplines belonging to discourse studies.

Each of these disciplines (rhetoric, sociolinguistics, discourse analysis, conversation analysis, etc.) is based on a specific interest.

The interest of discourse analysis is to consider that discourse articulates text and social places.

This means that its object is not textual organisation nor communicative situation, but what binds them through a certain genre.

Like most French speaking discourse analysts, he draws on enunciative pragmatics.

His research has tackled a great diversity of corpora, apart from ordinary conversation: advertising, handbooks, literature, newspapers, politics, philosophy, religion, the Internet… He justifies the diversity of his corpora by claiming that discourse analysts must study any manifestation of discourse, instead of focusing only on conversation, media and other social areas such as politics, education, business, justice, the health system.

• Interdiscourse: building on his research on religious controversies, he has developed a theory of "intermisunderstanding".

He assumes that in a given field the relevant unit of analysis is not each discourse in isolation but the ruled interaction between discourses through which the enunciative identities are defined and preserved.

According to M.-A Paveau and G.-E.

Sarfati, "Maingueneau shows how a discourse is born, how it develops into a consistent whole and a homogeneous space that lasts beyond the individual and temporal variations"

• Genres: like many other discourse analysts, he gives a central role to genres of discourse, which are analysed into various components: partners, place, time, etc. A genre is considered as a "scene of enunciation", which is broken down into a) an "enclosing scene" (religious, political, administrative, medical, etc.), b) a "generic scene" which assigns roles to actors, prescribes the right place and the right moment, the medium, the text superstructure, etc.; c) a “scenography”: the same generic scene, for instance preaching in a church, may stage different scenographies: prophetic, friendly, meditative… The word scène 'is chosen in order to stress the idea that the act of enunciation, parole, is a mise en scène, a sort of theatrical production that takes place in the form of a self-constituting process occurring within a defined discursive space. By adopting the theatrical metaphor of scène d’énonciation, Maingueneau endeavors to enter discourse “from the inside.”

• Ethos: he contributed to introducing the question of ethos into the field of discourse analysis.

He has developed the concept of “embodiment” (in French « incorporation »): the addressee constructs a certain image of the speaker, by giving him/her psychological (“character”) and somatic (“corporality”) properties, based on shared stereotypes

• Self-constituting discourses: in the universe of discourse a specific area can be delimited: that of “self-constituting discourses” (science, philosophy, Art, law, philosophy religion).

They have a particular relationship with the foundations of society.

To found other discourses without being founded by them, they must set themselves up as intimately bound with a legitimising Source and show that they are in accordance with it, owing to the operations by which they structure their texts.

Maingueneau has mainly studied literature and philosophy, in this perspective.

Tightly connected with self-constituting discourses, the concept of paratopy has been widely used in literary theory, in particular in postcolonial; and gender studies.

• Textless sentences (or “aphorisations”): a multitude of sentences that do not belong to a text, a cohesive sequence of sentences, are in circulation: they can by definition be detached (mottos, slogans, sayings...) or extracted from texts (maxims, soundbites, titles in newspapers...).

Maingueneau assumes that these sentences do not imply the same kind of enunciation as usual utterances: while in “texualizing enunciation” speakers produce texts belonging to genres, for aphorising enunciations the very notions of text and speaker are irrelevant

2017

• Gender: he published two books about the figure of the fatal woman, and various articles about the relationship between woman and sayings and about the "Précieuses" of the French 17th century

• Adhering writings: these are not produced by a speaker, but are written on objects or human beings to which they are appropriated: labels on goods, the artist's name engraved on a sculpture, a plaque indicating the name of a street, a sentence on a T-shirt, the word "Police" on a uniform, etc. The addition of such writings modifies the identity of what they are applied to; they make it part of a new network of uses and actors.