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(2004) Bakhtinian perspectives on language and culture, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Between relativism and absolutism

towards an emergentist definition of meaning potential

Mika Lähteenmäki

pp. 91-113

The dialogical "meaning as a potential" approach can be seen as a critique of those mainstream theories of semantics and pragmatics which take for granted the idea that a linguistic expression has an invariant linguistic meaning or a semantic representation independent of actual situated language use.1 In dialogism, this view is rejected and a linguistic expression is considered as a relatively open meaning potential, that is, a multiplicity of possible meanings. Thus, a linguistic expression represents a meaning resource which attains a fixed and specific meaning only as a result of dialogical interaction between speaker and listener in a certain social context. It is noteworthy that, within a dialogical approach to language, there are slightly different views concerning the applicability of the notion of meaning potential. For instance, Per Linell (1998: 118) sees it first and foremost as an alternative model of lexical semantics, whereas R. Rommetveit's (1988) "linguistic expressions' seem to include both words and sentences.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9780230005679_5

Full citation:

Lähteenmäki, M. (2004)., Between relativism and absolutism: towards an emergentist definition of meaning potential, in F. Bostad, C. Brandist, L. Evensen & H. C. Faber (eds.), Bakhtinian perspectives on language and culture, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 91-113.

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