Forrester2006a

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Forrester2006a
BibType ARTICLE
Key Forrester2006a
Author(s) Michael A. Forrester, David Reason
Title Competency and participation in acquiring a mastery of language: A reconsideration of the idea of membership
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Conversation Analysis, Ethnomethodology, Participation, Language acquisition, Membership Categorization Analysis
Publisher
Year 2006
Language
City
Month
Journal The Sociological Review
Volume 54
Number 3
Pages 446-466
URL Link
DOI 10.1111/j.1467-954X.2006.00625.x
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

For ethnomethodology and conversation analysis the concept of ‘member’ or ‘participant’ remains central. The aim of this paper is to consider a number of ideas originally outlined by Garfinkel and Sacks (1970), and by way of extension and clarification, discuss transcript extracts from recorded everyday interactions between two parents and their pre-school child. We note that membership, or what might constitute being a member, involves possessing a mastery of language and being able to produce and recognise glossing practices. Furthermore, a member is someone who recognises that the actions which make conversations possible are reflexively accountable practices. By looking at extracts where a child is ‘learning how to talk’ we find evidence in support of the suggestions that: (a) membership is indeed a dynamic and concerted accomplishment in context; (b) adults often treat children as ‘good-enough’ members; and (c) infants can attain membership status not only with reference to displaying a mastery of language, but possibly by displaying a mastery of communication. We close by noting that one of Garfinkel and Sacks' (1970) particular insights was that in displaying mastery of language, speakers display membership, but mastery of language is itself a concerted accomplishment in occasion precisely because speakers display membership by not drawing attention to the fact that they are indeed a member.

Notes