Goodwin2020

From emcawiki
Revision as of 03:41, 12 October 2020 by BurakTekin (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=ARTICLE |Author(s)=Marjorie H. Goodwin; Heather Lloyd; |Title=The face of noncompliance in family interaction |Tag(s)=EMCA; multimodality; Affective stance...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
Goodwin2020
BibType ARTICLE
Key Goodwin2020
Author(s) Marjorie H. Goodwin, Heather Lloyd
Title The face of noncompliance in family interaction
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, multimodality, Affective stance, Family Interaction
Publisher
Year 2020
Language English
City
Month
Journal Text & Talk
Volume 40
Number 5
Pages 573–598
URL Link
DOI https://doi.org/10.1515/text-2020-2080
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

Download BibTex

Abstract

This article examines the co-construction of dispute in parent-child remedial interchanges, where preference for provocation rather than agreement exists. Employing methodologies of video ethnography, linguistic anthropology, and conversation analysis, we examine practices for dispute management in middle class Los Angeles families (1540 h of video across 32 US families were collected and examined between 2002 and 2005) as well as in (sub)-working-class families in the historic center neighborhood of the Quartieri Spagnoli in Napoli, Italy (120 h of video across six families were collected and examined between 2008 and 2010). We problematize the notion that preference structures featuring politeness and moves towards swift social equilibrium in remedial interchanges are the basic organizing principles used in family interaction. Our findings suggest that rather than quickly restoring ritual equilibrium, children can create their own “character contests” in which they compete with parents for control. In response to a child’s breach, noncompliance, or offensive action, the parents can sanction inappropriate behavior, and socialize the child into what counts, in the family culture, as morally appropriate behavior. Whereas in US middle class families, the parents pursue apologies, in Neapolitan (sub)-working-class families, the parents are more concerned about explanations and accounts for inappropriate desires and actions. There is no expectation that the children apologize for untoward behavior. Across culture and class, during adult-child socializing encounters, moral claims intersect with affective stances to develop and negotiate personhood, identity, and adherence to cultural norms.

Notes