Difference between revisions of "Poulios2016"

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|BibType=INPROCEEDINGS
 
|BibType=INPROCEEDINGS
 
|Author(s)=Apostolos Poulios
 
|Author(s)=Apostolos Poulios
|Title=Exploiting the partitioning constancy/inconstancy
+
|Title=Exploiting the partitioning constancy/inconstancy of Membership Categorization Devices: Evidence from age categorization
of Membership Categorization Devices:
+
|Tag(s)=EMCA; MCA; Membership Categorization; Age; Identity;
Evidence from age categorization
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; MCA; Membership Categorization; Age; Identity;  
 
 
|Key=Poulios2016
 
|Key=Poulios2016
 
|Year=2016
 
|Year=2016
|Booktitle=Selected Papers of the 21st International Symposium on Theoretical and Applied Linguistics  
+
|Booktitle=Selected Papers of the 21st International Symposium on Theoretical and Applied Linguistics
 
|URL=https://ejournals.lib.auth.gr/thal/article/viewFile/5303/5190
 
|URL=https://ejournals.lib.auth.gr/thal/article/viewFile/5303/5190
|Abstract=This paper adopts the Ethnomethodological approach to the construction of age
+
|Abstract=This paper adopts the Ethnomethodological approach to the construction of age identities by combining two strands of the Ethnomethodological study of talk-ininteraction, i.e. Conversation Analysis (CA) and, especially, Membership Categorization Analysis (MCA). Ethnomethodology studies the methods individuals use to create the social order within which they interact: it is interested in what Garfinkel calls the “background expectancies” (1967: 37), the commonsense knowledge that members of a society must have in order to function in society. Combining CA and MCA allows us to examine these expectancies or sets of commonsense knowledge as social objects produced during talk by exploring the ways in which talk “index[es] or constitute[s] social and cultural identities, roles, relationships, stances and activities” (Lepper 2000: 4). Therefore, social identities are analyzed as accomplishments of members in the process of everyday interaction.
identities by combining two strands of the Ethnomethodological study of talk-ininteraction,
 
i.e. Conversation Analysis (CA) and, especially, Membership
 
Categorization Analysis (MCA). Ethnomethodology studies the methods individuals
 
use to create the social order within which they interact: it is interested in what
 
Garfinkel calls the “background expectancies” (1967: 37), the commonsense
 
knowledge that members of a society must have in order to function in society.
 
Combining CA and MCA allows us to examine these expectancies or sets of
 
commonsense knowledge as social objects produced during talk by exploring the
 
ways in which talk “index[es] or constitute[s] social and cultural identities, roles,
 
relationships, stances and activities” (Lepper 2000: 4). Therefore, social identities are
 
analyzed as accomplishments of members in the process of everyday interaction.
 
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 01:05, 4 November 2018

Poulios2016
BibType INPROCEEDINGS
Key Poulios2016
Author(s) Apostolos Poulios
Title Exploiting the partitioning constancy/inconstancy of Membership Categorization Devices: Evidence from age categorization
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, MCA, Membership Categorization, Age, Identity
Publisher
Year 2016
Language
City
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages
URL Link
DOI
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
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Howpublished
Book title Selected Papers of the 21st International Symposium on Theoretical and Applied Linguistics
Chapter

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Abstract

This paper adopts the Ethnomethodological approach to the construction of age identities by combining two strands of the Ethnomethodological study of talk-ininteraction, i.e. Conversation Analysis (CA) and, especially, Membership Categorization Analysis (MCA). Ethnomethodology studies the methods individuals use to create the social order within which they interact: it is interested in what Garfinkel calls the “background expectancies” (1967: 37), the commonsense knowledge that members of a society must have in order to function in society. Combining CA and MCA allows us to examine these expectancies or sets of commonsense knowledge as social objects produced during talk by exploring the ways in which talk “index[es] or constitute[s] social and cultural identities, roles, relationships, stances and activities” (Lepper 2000: 4). Therefore, social identities are analyzed as accomplishments of members in the process of everyday interaction.

Notes