The language of turn and sequence
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The language of turn and sequence
(Oxford studies in sociolinguistics / Edward Finegan, general editor)
Oxford University Press, 2002
Available at 39 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This collection of previously unpublished, cutting-edge research discusses the conversation analysis (CA) approach to understanding language use. CA is the dominant theory for analyzing the social use of language and is concerned with the description of how speakers engage in conversation and other forms of social interaction involving language. Its proponents are not only linguists but sociologists and anthropologists as well. The unifying theme of these chapters
is the intersection of practice and form through the construction of turns and sequences.
Table of Contents
1: Cecilia E. Ford, Barbara A. Fox, and Sandra A. Thompson: Introduction
2: Cecilia E. Ford, Barbara A. Fox, and Sandra A. Thompson: Constituency and the Grammar of Turn Increments
3: Lisa Capps and Elinor Ochs: Cultivating Prayer
4: Charles Goodwin, Marjorie H. Goodwin, and David Olsher: Producing Sense with Nonsense Syllables: Turn and Sequence in Conversations with a Man with Severe Aphasia
5: Makoto Hayashi, Junko Mori, and Tomoyo Tagaki: Contingent Achievement of Co-Tellership in a Japanese Conversation: An Analysis of Talk, Gaze and Gesture
6: Sally Jacoby and Patrick Gonzales: Saying What Wasn't Said: Negative Observation as a Linguistic Resource for the Interactional Achievement of Performance Feedback
7: Marja-Leena Sorjonen: Recipient Activities: The Particle No as a Go-Ahead Response in Finnish Conversations
8: John Heritage: Oh-Prefaced Responses to Assessments: A Method of Modifying Agreement/Disagreement
9: Gene H. Lerner: Turn-Sharing: The Choral Co-Production of Talk-in-Interaction
10: Robert Jasperson: Some Linguistic Aspects of Closure Cut-Off
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"