Difference between revisions of "Turner1976"

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|URL=http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/semi.1976.17.issue-3/semi.1976.17.3.233/semi.1976.17.3.233.xml
 
|URL=http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/semi.1976.17.issue-3/semi.1976.17.3.233/semi.1976.17.3.233.xml
 
|DOI=10.1515/semi.1976.17.3.233
 
|DOI=10.1515/semi.1976.17.3.233
|Abstract=The analyzability of conversation by professional students of language use
 
depends upon the analyzability of conversation in its production, and over
 
its course, by participant conversationalists.
 
1
 
The analysis which partici-
 
pant conversationalists perform upon their own and other's talk in the
 
course of its production, however, is not to be confused with the later com-
 
mentaries that participants or other interested parties may give, or be per-
 
suaded to give, as 'clarification' of 'what really happened' or what was
 
'meant at the time'. Such commentaries are themselves features of the very
 
action scenes they are directed to clarifying, and are products of attention
 
to the action field's relevances. Insofar as they can be said to constitute
 
analysis of conversation at all, they constitute an essentially interested
 
analysis, responsive to the accountable features of the domain of activities
 
of which it is a part.
 
An interested analysis is to be distinguished from that attention to the
 
structural properties of on-going talk which attempts to delineate them as
 
speaker/hearer products. But the distinction is not merely one of emphasis,
 
for, as I shall attempt to demonstrate in the following pages, interested
 
analyses are essentially ad hoc (they are required to be, of course, by vir-
 
tue of their attachment to the domain of action); while the kind of analysis
 
we must pursue as students of conversational order is directed to the con-
 
struction of an apparatus which is usable on materials other than the data it
 
initially handles. I hope to clarify this distinction by presenting for exam-
 
ination an essentially interested analysis of a conversation, furnishing some
 
comments upon its ad hoc character, and in contrast, offering an analysis
 
which explicitly orients to its working apparatus as the latter is built and
 
put into service.
 
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 06:23, 28 October 2019

Turner1976
BibType ARTICLE
Key Turner1976
Author(s) Roy Turner
Title Utterance positioning as an interactional resource
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Conversation Analysis
Publisher
Year 1976
Language
City
Month
Journal Semiotica
Volume 17
Number 3
Pages 233–254
URL Link
DOI 10.1515/semi.1976.17.3.233
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract


Notes