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Intro
Preface
Contents
Notes on Contributors
List of Figures
List of Tables
Marina Sbis'̉s Deontic Approach to Speech Actions
1 Themes in Marina Sbis'̉s Philosophy
2 Illocution and Conventionality
Convention and Intention in Illocution
Illocutionary Effects as Conventional Effects
3 Illocutionary Effects and Deontic Modality
4 Accommodation and Felicity Conditions
5 This Collection: Structure and Contents
References
Should Speech Act Theory Eschew Propositions?
1 Introduction
2 Sbis'̉s Argument Against Propositions

3 Limitations of the "Attitudinal" Approach to Speech Act Theory
4 A Middle Way: Contentful Commitments
5 Contentful Indicators of Force
References
On the Conventional Nature of Illocutionary Acts: Uptake, Conventions, and Illocutionary Effects
1 Introduction
2 Sbis'̉s Criticism of the Intentionalist Understanding of Speech Efficiency
The Securing of Uptake as the Backbone of the Intentionalist Conception
Sbis'̉s Defense of the Conventionalist Position
3 On the Conventional Nature of the Illocutionary Act as a Social Act and Its Social Conditions

The Speech Act of Telling as a Public Act of Commitment
On Social Conditions and the Limits of Context Plasticity
4 Conclusion
References
Varieties of Uptake
1 Introduction
2 What Is Uptake?
3 Securing of Uptake: Hearer-Dependent Reading
Ratification Theory
Constitution Theory
Collaboration Theory
4 Challenges and Objections
Scope
The Power of the Hearer
Deliberate Misinterpretation
5 Communicative Versus Normative Dimension
6 Conclusion: A Speaker-Dependent Reading
References
Interactional Negotiation
1 Introduction

2 Uptake, Responses, and Accommodation in Force Negotiation
3 Language Conventions as Lineages of Negotiated Precedents
References
Some Varieties of Illocutionary Pluralism
1 Introduction
2 Illocutionary Force
3 Sbis'̉s Pluralism
4 Johnson's Pluralism
5 Lewi?ski's Pluralism
6 Conclusion
References
Speech Acts and Ventriloquation: The Contribution of Marina Sbis ̉to a General Theory of Action and Performativity
1 Introduction
2 Action: What's in This Word?
3 Speech Acts as Specific Types of Action
4 Textual Agency

5 Speech Acts and Ventriloquation
6 Conclusion
References
Towards a Unified Theory of Illocutionary Normativity
1 Varieties of Illocutionary Norms
2 Sbis'̉s Framework: The "Tripartite View"
The Tripartite View
Applying the Tripartition to Existing Notions
Terminology
Revising and Extending the Model
3 Two Challenges for the Tripartite Model
Upstream Rules and Downstream Obligations
A Neglected Category: Aims
4 Cooperation, Rules, and Illocutionary Concepts
Disagreement About Rules
The Checklist View
Cooperative Rules as Rational Expectations

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