Cekaite2016

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Cekaite2016
BibType ARTICLE
Key Cekaite2016
Author(s) Asta Cekaite
Title Touch as social control: Haptic organization of attention in adult–child interactions
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Touch, Adult-child interactions, Social control, Attention, Embodiment
Publisher
Year 2016
Language
City
Month
Journal Journal of Pragmatics
Volume 92
Number
Pages 30–42
URL Link
DOI 10.1016/j.pragma.2015.11.003
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This study examines the interactional organization of sustained (temporally extended) control touch, deployed in adult–child encounters in Swedish primary school and family settings. The detailed analysis shows that sustained touches are employed by adults to manage and monitor children's participation, usually calling for ‘appropriate’ displays of attention to particular activities. Sustained touch sets the evolving limits on the child's postural orientation and movements by establishing a sensorial, corporeal contact and is instrumental in arranging the child's bodily positioning into a particular participation framework. Retrospectively, it orients to the child recipient's inattentiveness and inappropriate participation. Prospectively, it solicits and sustains the child's coordinated and attentive participation in activities that constitute a state of talk, e.g. interactionally ‘big packages’ (Sacks, 1995), i.e., adults’ extended instructions or disciplining. In multi-tasking situations, sustained touch works to manage the multiple overlapping participation frameworks. The adult, already engaged in a talk-based activity, constrains the touch recipient's conversational contribution, or puts it on hold, using sustained touch as a prosthetic resource to signal her/his prospective attention. In all, the interactional analysis of interpersonal touch shows how the situational conditions, social roles and relations inform and shape body behavior.

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