Difference between revisions of "Anward2014"
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|Publisher=De Gruyter Mouton | |Publisher=De Gruyter Mouton | ||
|Year=2014 | |Year=2014 | ||
+ | |Language=English | ||
+ | |Address=Berlin | ||
|Booktitle=Grammar and Dialogism: Sequential, Syntactic, and Prosodic Patterns between Emergence and Sedimentation | |Booktitle=Grammar and Dialogism: Sequential, Syntactic, and Prosodic Patterns between Emergence and Sedimentation | ||
|Pages=53–76 | |Pages=53–76 | ||
+ | |URL=https://www.degruyter.com/view/books/9783110358612/9783110358612.53/9783110358612.53.xml | ||
|DOI=10.1515/9783110358612.53 | |DOI=10.1515/9783110358612.53 | ||
|Series=Linguistik — Impulse & Tendenzen | |Series=Linguistik — Impulse & Tendenzen | ||
+ | |Abstract=It is argued that a language, a langue in a modified Saussurean sense, is a regular outcome of conversation. Based on an analysis of a series of five Swedish telephone conversations, it is demonstrated through a turn-by-turn analysis of the first of these phone calls that an embedded and dynamic system of linguistic resources emerges in conversation and is stabilized in a tradition of conversations, and that the very methods which participants use to structure conversation - turn-taking, sequence organization, and repair – also structure conversation like a language. | ||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 10:10, 11 December 2019
Anward2014 | |
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BibType | INCOLLECTION |
Key | Anward2014 |
Author(s) | Jan Anward |
Title | Dialogue and tradition: The open secret of language |
Editor(s) | Susanne Günther, Wolfgang Imo, Jörg Bücker |
Tag(s) | Repair, Turn-taking, Sequence organization, Emergence, Grammar |
Publisher | De Gruyter Mouton |
Year | 2014 |
Language | English |
City | Berlin |
Month | |
Journal | |
Volume | |
Number | |
Pages | 53–76 |
URL | Link |
DOI | 10.1515/9783110358612.53 |
ISBN | |
Organization | |
Institution | |
School | |
Type | |
Edition | |
Series | Linguistik — Impulse & Tendenzen |
Howpublished | |
Book title | Grammar and Dialogism: Sequential, Syntactic, and Prosodic Patterns between Emergence and Sedimentation |
Chapter |
Abstract
It is argued that a language, a langue in a modified Saussurean sense, is a regular outcome of conversation. Based on an analysis of a series of five Swedish telephone conversations, it is demonstrated through a turn-by-turn analysis of the first of these phone calls that an embedded and dynamic system of linguistic resources emerges in conversation and is stabilized in a tradition of conversations, and that the very methods which participants use to structure conversation - turn-taking, sequence organization, and repair – also structure conversation like a language.
Notes