Bonifazi2022

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Bonifazi2022
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Bonifazi2022
Author(s) Anna Bonifazi
Title Dialogic Syntax in Ancient Greek Conversation
Editor(s) Raymond F. Person Jr., Robin Wooffitt, John P. Rae
Tag(s) EMCA, Syntax, Greek
Publisher Routledge
Year 2022
Language English
City New York
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 140–179
URL Link
DOI 10.4324/9780429328930-9
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Bridging the Gap Between Conversation Analysis and Poetics: Studies in Talk-In-Interaction and Literature Twenty-Five Years after Jefferson
Chapter

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Abstract

This chapter views conversation reported in ancient Greek literary pieces as linguistic material to test Jefferson’s investigations into sound- and category-triggers activating affinities in natural conversation. The argument goes beyond the supposition that re-created or even totally made-up conversations ought to resemble, and to be recognized as, natural dialogues. The paper proposes a further step by positing that the ordinary side of literary talk is poetic in itself to the extent that it makes use of ‘dialogic syntax’, a concept developed by John Du Bois, inspired by previous work on parallelism and on polyphony in language, and applied to everyday conversation. What for Sacks and Jefferson constitutes ‘rephrased repetitions’ for Du Bois constitutes resonance, defined as ‘catalytic activation of affinities across utterances’. The analyses of ancient Greek texts focus on as artful dialogic sequences as possible (six passages belonging to six different genres), so that there is maximal exposure to arguments that may counter or at least challenge the core idea of dialogic syntax. It is shown that such a core idea can only be fully confirmed, regardless of the different formats, contexts, and meanings.

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