Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Front Matter
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Transcription Glossary
- Introduction
- Part I Principles
- 1 What is Conversation Analysis?
- A definition of conversation analysis
- Harvey Sacks: order at all points
- The sociological background
- From ‘obvious’ to ‘orderly’: some remarks on conversational description
- 2 Conversational Structures: The Foundations of Conversation Analysis
- Conversational sequencing: adjacency pairs and ‘preference’
- The organization of turn-taking
- Orienting to turn-taking rules: overlapping talk
- The sequential organization of repair
- Part II Practices
- 3 Data and Transcription
- Approaching transcription: some preliminary issues
- Transcription conventions
- A comparative exercise
- A comparison between two treatments of the same conversation
- 4 Analysing Data I: Building Collections and Identifying Phenomena
- Collections and patterns
- Participants’ orientations to a conversational device
- Analysing phenomena: further issues
- 5 Analysing Data II: Extended Sequences and Single Cases
- Analysing single episodes
- Storytelling sequences
- Part III Implications
- 6 Talk in Institutional Settings
- Orienting to context: the comparative approach
- Non-formal institutions: tasks, identities and turn design
- Bricolage and the institutional shape of interaction
- 7 Conversation Analysis and Research Interview Data
- The structured interview
- Semi-structured interviews
- The focused, open ended or unstructured interview
- 8 Extensions of Conversation Analysis
- The language of political rhetoric
- CA, human–computer interaction and systems design
- Children’s talk
- The order in ‘disorderly’ talk
- 9 Critical Engagements: Sociology, Psychology and Linguistics
- Sociology: conversation analysis, interaction and power
- Psychology: conversation analysis, language and cognition
- Linguistics: grammar, prosody and social interaction
- References
- Index
- End User License Agreement




