Difference between revisions of "Jegede2020"

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(Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=ARTICLE |Author(s)=Olusegun O. Jegede; Olukemi B. Adesina |Title=Conversational Strategies in Ola Rotimi’s The gods Are Not to Blame |Tag(s)=EMCA; Ola Ro...")
 
 
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|Number=2
 
|Number=2
 
|Pages=64-75
 
|Pages=64-75
|DOI=:10.3968/11902
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|URL=http://www.cscanada.net/index.php/sll/article/view/11902
|Abstract=This paper examined the conversational features used by characters
+
|DOI=10.3968/11902
through talk in Ola Rotimi’s The gods Are not to Blame. Several
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|Abstract=This paper examined the conversational features used by characters through talk in Ola Rotimi’s The gods Are not to Blame. Several studies have been carried out on Ola Rotimi’s works but this study was motivated by the scanty scholarly studies on the conversational strategies used in the text. In order to bring out the features of conversation in the text, the text was critically read, and salient conversational features were identified. The features were interpreted according to the messages they expressed in the text. The findings revealed that conversational features such as monologue, turn taking, turn allocation, speech overlap, error and repair mechanism, adjacency pairs, and insertion sequence were used to generate different effects in the text. The study concludes that the conversational features employed by the author create orderliness and regulate participants’ talk in the interaction towards actualising the thematic goals of the text. Thus, the study indicates that conversation analysis gives a deeper and better understanding of human utterances as portrayed through the characters in the text, thereby increasing the readers understanding of the text.
studies have been carried out on Ola Rotimi’s works but this study was
 
motivated by the scanty scholarly studies on the conversational strategies
 
used in the text. In order to bring out the features of conversation in the
 
text, the text was critically read, and salient conversational features were
 
identified. The features were interpreted according to the messages they
 
expressed in the text. The findings revealed that conversational features
 
such as monologue, turn taking, turn allocation, speech overlap, error
 
and repair mechanism, adjacency pairs, and insertion sequence were
 
used to generate different effects in the text. The study concludes that
 
the conversational features employed by the author create orderliness
 
and regulate participants’ talk in the interaction towards actualising the
 
thematic goals of the text. Thus, the study indicates that conversation
 
analysis gives a deeper and better understanding of human utterances
 
as portrayed through the characters in the text, thereby increasing the
 
readers understanding of the text.
 
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 04:13, 16 August 2023

Jegede2020
BibType ARTICLE
Key Jegede2020
Author(s) Olusegun O. Jegede, Olukemi B. Adesina
Title Conversational Strategies in Ola Rotimi’s The gods Are Not to Blame
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Ola Rotimi, Literature
Publisher
Year 2020
Language English
City
Month
Journal Studies in Literature and Language
Volume 21
Number 2
Pages 64-75
URL Link
DOI 10.3968/11902
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

Download BibTex

Abstract

This paper examined the conversational features used by characters through talk in Ola Rotimi’s The gods Are not to Blame. Several studies have been carried out on Ola Rotimi’s works but this study was motivated by the scanty scholarly studies on the conversational strategies used in the text. In order to bring out the features of conversation in the text, the text was critically read, and salient conversational features were identified. The features were interpreted according to the messages they expressed in the text. The findings revealed that conversational features such as monologue, turn taking, turn allocation, speech overlap, error and repair mechanism, adjacency pairs, and insertion sequence were used to generate different effects in the text. The study concludes that the conversational features employed by the author create orderliness and regulate participants’ talk in the interaction towards actualising the thematic goals of the text. Thus, the study indicates that conversation analysis gives a deeper and better understanding of human utterances as portrayed through the characters in the text, thereby increasing the readers understanding of the text.

Notes