Repairing the broken surface of talk : managing problems in speaking, hearing, and understanding in conversation
著者
書誌事項
Repairing the broken surface of talk : managing problems in speaking, hearing, and understanding in conversation
(Foundations of human interaction / general editor, N.J. Enfield)
Oxford University Press, c2018
- : softcover
- : hardcover
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This book is a collection of studies of corrections and repair in conversation, by Gail Jefferson, co-founder of the field of Conversation Analysis and one of its foremost researchers. Throughout her career, Jefferson explored the almost hidden, subterranean world of the seemingly minor errors and mistakes that people make in interaction. Speech errors sometimes have an ideological significance (e.g. a defendant apparently about to refer to the police as "cops" but
cutting off just in time to correct that to "officer"). Despite the virtual invisibility of these errors, such problematic moments in interaction bring into play ways of remedying and correcting errors that can have profound significance for the participants. Through these studies Jefferson reveals
the delicacy, the subtlety with which moments of communication difficulties and possible miscommunications are remedied, in such a way as to minimize the damage that might otherwise be caused to the interaction.
This collection represents the most distinctive, sustained, and incisive exploration of what speakers are "up to" in episodes when they correct errors in their own and one another's speech. Combining rigorous technical analysis, extraordinary methodological innovation, and acute observation, Jefferson explored what she herself referred to as the "wild side of Conversation Analysis." The coherence and depth of her research is revealed in these studies, which include four previously unpublished
papers, as well as others that were published variously in less widely-distributed journals and publications. In the volume's introduction, editors Joerg Bergmann and Paul Drew provide an appraisal, for the first time, of the significance of Jefferson's stunningly inventive research into errors and
their correction in conversation.
目次
Acknowledgements
Glossary of Transcript Symbols
Introduction: Jefferson's 'Wild Side' of Conversation Analysis by Joerg Bergmann and Paul Drew
1. Notes on Uh
2. Error correction as an interaction resource
3. At first I thought - A normalizing device for extraordinary events
4. The preference for self-correction in the organization of repair in conversation (with E.Schegloff and H.Sacks)
5. On the poetics of ordinary talk
6. What's in a 'nyem'?
7. The abominable 'Ne?' An exploration of post-response pursuit of response
8. On exposed and embedded correction in conversation
9. Remarks on 'non-correction' in conversation
10. Colligation as a device for minimizing repair or disagreement
11. A note on resolving ambiguity
12. Remarks on the post-self-correction repeat
13. Preliminary notes on abdicated other correction
Index
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