Jolanta Antas

Jolanta Antas (born 20 February 1954 in Szczecin) is a Polish professor of linguistics at the Jagiellonian University of Kraków.[1]

Antas is the head of the Institute of Theory of Communication at the Faculty of Polish Language and Literature of the Jagiellonian University. She conducts research on pragmatic and semantic aspects of negation and lying. With a team of associates, she's drafted a ground-breaking scientific study called “The map of Polish expressions”.[2]

On Lies and Lying

From September 1980 to 1989, Antas was a part of the Solidarity independent publishing movement. She was the author of articles, the editor and reviewer of texts, in "Hutniku" and " Małopolska monthly".[2]

Antas published two monographs on lying and negation called: O mechanizmach negowania (Kraków 1991), and O kłamstwie i kłamaniu (Kraków 1999). O kłamstwie i kłamaniu (On Lies and Lying) is notably the first Polish book devoted entirely to the phenomenon of lying in the process of verbal communication. The subject is closely related to both logic and philosophy from within the realm of linguistics. The human strategies discussed include partial judgments, false conclusions, misleading silence, secrets, half-truths, compliments, white lies and nonverbal lies.

She appeared at the GESPIN 2009 "Gesture and Speech in Interaction" conference.[3]

gollark: There are a decent amount in PHP because it was around and popular when the internet was exploding.
gollark: Basically every popular language has some successful projects.
gollark: The theoretical brilliance could probably be implemented with less effort than it would take to nicen the garbage while maintaining compatibility.
gollark: I disagree somewhat.
gollark: Well, it's not a parser, it's a renderer.

See also

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-02-19. Retrieved 2010-02-17.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "Jolanta Antas - Encyklopedia Solidarności" (in Polish). Encyklopedia-solidarnosci.pl. Retrieved 2013-06-12.
  3. "LINGUIST List 20.337: Applied Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Pragmatics/Poland". Linguistlist.org. 2 February 2009. Retrieved 2013-06-12.


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