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Reversals : a personal account of victory over dislexia.
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ISBN: 0395275164 Year: 1979 Publisher: Boston Houghton Mifflin

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Aphasia and associated disorders : taxonomy, localization, and recovery
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ISBN: 0808911937 Year: 1979 Publisher: New York (N.Y.): Grune and Stratton

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Reconstruction and rehabilitation of the burned patient.
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ISBN: 0917478509 Year: 1979 Publisher: Ann Arbor (Mich.) : National institute for burn medicine,

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Nutritional Management of the Cancer Patient
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ISBN: 0890043574 Year: 1979 Publisher: New York : Raven Press,

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Asian patients in hospital and at home
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Year: 1979 Publisher: London King Edward's Hospital Fund

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Adaptation et restauration des fonctions nerveuses
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ISBN: 285334178X 9782853341783 Year: 1979 Publisher: Villeurbanne : Simep,


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Faire évaluer l'hôpital par le malade

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Functional evaluation and rehabilitation of cardiac patients
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ISBN: 0883721252 9780883721254 Year: 1979 Publisher: Miami Symposia Specialists

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A physician faces cancer in himself
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ISBN: 0873953959 Year: 1979 Publisher: Albany State university of New York at Albany

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Crazy talk : a study of the discourse of Schizophrenic speakers
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ISBN: 030640236X 146159121X 1461591198 Year: 1979 Publisher: New York (N.Y.): Plenum

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This book is a study of discourse-the flow of talk-of schizophrenic speakers. Our goal is to understand the processes which account for the ordinary flow of talk that happens all the time between speakers and lis­ teners. How do conversations happen? What is needed by a listener to follow a speaker's words and respond appropriately to them? How much can a speaker take for granted and how much must be stated explicitly for the listener to follow the speaker's meanings readily and easily? Each time we ask these questions, we seem to have to go back to some place prior to the "ordinary" adult conversation. This time, we have tried reversing the questions and asking: What happens when conversa­ tion fails? Prompted in part by an early paper by Robin Lakoff to the Chi­ cago Linguistics Society and by Herb Clark's studies of listener processes, we wondered what a speaker has to do to make the listener finally stop making allowances and stop trying to adjust the conversational contract to cooperate. This inquiry led us to the schizophrenic speaker. When a listener decides that the speaker's talk is "crazy," he or she is giving up on the normal form of conversation and saying, in effect, this talk is ex­ traordinary and something is wrong. We thought that, if we could specify what makes a conversation fail, we might learn what has to be present for a conversation to succeed.

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