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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
for linguists,
By Onanseed (Philadelphia, PA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Claiming Power in Doctor-Patient Talk (Oxford Studies in Sociolinguistics) (Hardcover)
For the person who wrote the negative review, please note that even the most cursory glance at this book's cover would tell you that it was never intended to be something you would find in the self-help section at your local bookstore. For one thing, it's in the Oxford Studies in Sociolinguistics series. That suggests, at a minimum, that it is an academic text, not a consumer's how-to guide for talking to your doctor. The back of the cover states that the book would be a "powerful pedagogical tool...for language classes...and...clarification of clinical issues." It states further that its topics include discourse theory, topic transitions, and co-construction. A consumer's guide on patient-doctor talk would probably have less academic terminology and subject matter and, more importantly, like this text has clearly done, state its subject matter and target audience.
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Claiming Power in Doctor-Patient Talk (Oxford Studies in Sociolinguistics) by Nancy Ainsworth-Vaughn (Hardcover - June 25, 1998)
$98.00
In Stock | ||