Difference between revisions of "Robles2015"

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|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|Author(s)=Jessica S. Robles;
 
|Author(s)=Jessica S. Robles;
|Title=Extreme Case (Re)formulation as a Practice for Making Hearably Racist Talk Repairable
+
|Title=Extreme case (re)formulation as a practice for making hearably racist talk repairable
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Racism; Membership Categorization; Repair; Extreme Case Formulations;
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Racism; Membership Categorization; Repair; Extreme Case Formulations;
 
|Key=Robles2015
 
|Key=Robles2015
 
|Year=2015
 
|Year=2015
 +
|Language=English
 
|Journal=Journal of Language and Social Psychology
 
|Journal=Journal of Language and Social Psychology
|URL=http://jls.sagepub.com/content/early/2015/05/12/0261927X15586573?papetoc
+
|Volume=34
 +
|Number=4
 +
|Pages=390–409
 +
|URL=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0261927x15586573
 
|DOI=10.1177/0261927X15586573
 
|DOI=10.1177/0261927X15586573
|Note=needs post-publication info
 
 
|Abstract=This article investigates the interactional organization of racism through participant production and uptake of explicit racial membership categories across a corpus of 50+ hours of audio-/video-recorded interaction in three U.S. states. The discourse analysis examines one participant method for addressing “hearably racist” talk: echoing extreme versions of the problematic utterance to provide opportunities for repair work on inferable associations between membership categories and category-bound activities. Orienting to implicit inferential material as the source of trouble licenses participant account-seeking; treating the racism as a repairable downgrades its status as an overt instance of racism.
 
|Abstract=This article investigates the interactional organization of racism through participant production and uptake of explicit racial membership categories across a corpus of 50+ hours of audio-/video-recorded interaction in three U.S. states. The discourse analysis examines one participant method for addressing “hearably racist” talk: echoing extreme versions of the problematic utterance to provide opportunities for repair work on inferable associations between membership categories and category-bound activities. Orienting to implicit inferential material as the source of trouble licenses participant account-seeking; treating the racism as a repairable downgrades its status as an overt instance of racism.
 
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 01:58, 15 December 2019

Robles2015
BibType ARTICLE
Key Robles2015
Author(s) Jessica S. Robles
Title Extreme case (re)formulation as a practice for making hearably racist talk repairable
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Racism, Membership Categorization, Repair, Extreme Case Formulations
Publisher
Year 2015
Language English
City
Month
Journal Journal of Language and Social Psychology
Volume 34
Number 4
Pages 390–409
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/0261927X15586573
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This article investigates the interactional organization of racism through participant production and uptake of explicit racial membership categories across a corpus of 50+ hours of audio-/video-recorded interaction in three U.S. states. The discourse analysis examines one participant method for addressing “hearably racist” talk: echoing extreme versions of the problematic utterance to provide opportunities for repair work on inferable associations between membership categories and category-bound activities. Orienting to implicit inferential material as the source of trouble licenses participant account-seeking; treating the racism as a repairable downgrades its status as an overt instance of racism.

Notes