Conversation Analysis

Höfundur Rebecca Clift

Útgefandi Cambridge University Press

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9780521198509

Útgáfa 0

Útgáfuár

4.790 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Half title
  • Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics
  • Title page
  • Imprints page
  • Epigraph
  • Contents
  • Figures
  • Tables
  • Preface
  • The disciplinary scope of the book
  • Linguistic data
  • A note on how to use this book
  • Acknowledgements
  • 1 Introduction: why study conversation?
  • 1.1 The basics: the ‘Two Things’
  • 1.2 The view from linguistics
  • 1.2.1 The search for meaning
  • On semantic meaning: stability in action
  • Pragmatic meaning: three perspectives
  • (a) Speech Act Theory
  • (b) Gricean implicature
  • (c) Relevance Theory
  • 1.2.2 Observational approaches
  • (a) Sociolinguistics
  • (b) Interactional linguistics
  • (c) Interactional sociolinguistics and linguistic anthropology
  • 1.3 Beyond language: discourse analysis and CA
  • 1.4 Action and sequence: the implications
  • 1.5 The organisation of this volume and overview of chapters
  • 2 Towards an understanding of action: origins and perspectives
  • 2.1 On Goffman and Garfinkel
  • 2.2 Harvey Sacks: from ethnomethodology to conversation analysis
  • 2.3 Jefferson’s transcription system
  • 2.4 Capturing phenomena
  • 2.4.1 Developments of the Jefferson system
  • 2.5 CA transcription conventions: an overview
  • 1. Preliminaries [C]
  • 2. Temporal and sequential relationships
  • 3. Aspects of speech delivery
  • 4. Other markings
  • 3 Why that, now? Position and composition in interaction
  • 3.1 On position and composition
  • 3.1.1 How position matters: What are you doing?
  • 3.2 Adjacency and the adjacency pair
  • 3.2.1 Adjacency and cross-linguistic validity
  • 3.3 Expansion beyond the adjacency pair
  • 3.3.1 Pre-expansion
  • 3.3.2 Insert expansion
  • 3.3.3 Post-expansions
  • (a) Minimal post-expansions
  • (b) Non-minimal post-expansions
  • 3.4 The sequence: coherence and distributed cognition
  • 3.5 Conclusion: ‘sequence’ as infrastructure and context
  • 4 Interaction in time: the centrality of turn-taking
  • 4.1 Turn-taking: an overview
  • 4.2 A sketch of ‘a simplest systematics’
  • 4.2.1 The turn-constructional component
  • Syntactic completion
  • Prosodic and phonetic features of completion
  • Pragmatic markers of completion
  • 4.2.2 The turn-allocational component
  • Current speaker selects next speaker
  • Next speaker self-selects
  • (a) Pre-possible completion
  • (b) Pre-beginnings
  • 4.2.3 Beyond the first TCU
  • 4.3 The turn-taking rules
  • 4.4 More than one at a time: ‘interruption’, overlap and choral production
  • 4.5 No-one speaking: forms of silence
  • 4.6 Transforming silence: the role of grammar
  • 4.7 Local variation, universal system?
  • 4.8 Conclusion: grammar and social organisation in context
  • 5 The structure of sequences I: preference organisation
  • 5.1 Preference organisation: an introduction
  • 5.1.1 Preference and adjacency pairs
  • Preference and initiating turns
  • Preference and responsive turns
  • (a) Action preferences
  • (b) Format preferences
  • 5.1.2 Actions and formats: interactional implications
  • 5.1.3 An exception
  • 5.1.4 Between preferred and dispreferred: agendas, social norms and deontic authority in responsive turns
  • Answers to questions: conformity and resistance
  • Compliment responses
  • Resistance in response
  • 5.1.5 Preference and action categories
  • 5.2 Preference and the recognition of action
  • 5.3 Preference in person reference
  • 5.3.1 Preference, principles and defaults in person reference
  • 5.3.2 Preference and grammaticalisation
  • 5.3.3 Departures from default usage
  • 5.4 Conclusion: preference in the turn and the sequence
  • 6 The structure of sequences II: knowledge and authority in the construction of identity
  • 6.1 Identity in CA: the ‘membership categorisation device’
  • 6.1.1 Categories and collections of categories
  • 6.1.2 The rules of application
  • 6.2 Knowledge and authority as resources for action recognition
  • 6.2.1 Territories of knowledge in interaction
  • Epistemic authority and subordination in assessing
  • Epistemic domains, mobilising response and the epistemic engine
  • Epistemics and identity
  • 6.2.2 Authority in interaction
  • 6.3 Conclusion: knowledge, authority and agency in indirection
  • 7 Halting progressivity: the organisation of repair
  • 7.1 Self-repair
  • 7.1.1 Self-initiated self-repair in same TCU
  • 7.1.2 Self-initiated transition-space repairs
  • 7.1.3 Third position repairs
  • 7.1.4 Self-initiated other-repair
  • Gaze in self-initiated other-repair
  • 7.2 Other-repair
  • 7.2.1 Understanding checks
  • 7.2.2 Partial repeats
  • 7.2.3 Partial repeat + wh-word
  • 7.2.4 Wh-word
  • 7.2.5 Open class repair initiator
  • 7.3 Implicit forms of repair initiation: embodiment and gaze
  • 7.4 Conclusion: the defence of intersubjectivity
  • 8 Conclusion: discovering order
  • References
  • Author index
  • General index

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