Macropragmatics
The study of meaning-in-action across vast, systemic, and cultural contexts. It zooms out to see patterns, norms, and conventions that govern entire societies, institutions, or historical periods. It asks: How do broad cultural narratives, ideological frameworks, and historical forces shape the kinds of communication and behavior that are possible, legitimate, or effective? It analyzes the pragmatic "rules of the game" for a whole civilization or epoch.
Example: Analyzing political discourse in a democracy. Macropragmatics doesn't look at one senator's speech, but at the overarching norms: the expectation of "civil debate," the pragmatic function of filibusters as delay tactics, how the media frame issues, and the deep cultural narratives (like "the American Dream") that speakers must pragmatically engage with to be persuasive. It explains why a communication style that works in a boardroom (direct, data-driven) would fail pragmatically in a religious ceremony, because the macro-context dictates entirely different rules for what makes an act meaningful.
Macropragmatics by Dumuabzu January 25, 2026
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