Dingemanse2020a
Dingemanse2020a | |
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BibType | INCOLLECTION |
Key | Dingemanse2020a |
Author(s) | Mark Dingemanse |
Title | Recruiting assistance and collaboration: a West-African corpus study |
Editor(s) | Simeon Floyd, Giovanni Rossi, N. J. Enfield |
Tag(s) | EMCA |
Publisher | Language Science Press |
Year | 2020 |
Language | English |
City | Berlin |
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Number | |
Pages | 369–421 |
URL | Link |
DOI | 10.5281/zenodo.4018388 |
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Edition | |
Series | Diversity Linguistics |
Howpublished | |
Book title | Getting others to do things: A pragmatic typology of recruitments |
Chapter |
Abstract
Doing things for and with others is one of the foundations of human social life. This chapter studies a systematic collection of 207 recruitments of assistance and collaboration from a video corpus of everyday conversations in Siwu, a Kwa language of Ghana. A range of social action formats and semiotic resources reveals how language is adapted to the interactional challenges posed by recruitment. While many of the formats bear a language-specific signature, their sequential and interactional properties show important commonalities across languages. Two tentative findings are put forward for further cross-linguistic examination: a "rule of three" that may play a role in the organization of successive response pursuits, and a striking commonality in animal-oriented recruitments across languages that may be explained by convergent cultural evolution. The Siwu recruitment system emerges as one instance of a sophisticated machinery for organizing collaborative action that transcends language and culture.
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