Difference between revisions of "Bilmes2015"

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{{BibEntry
 
{{BibEntry
 
|BibType=BOOK
 
|BibType=BOOK
|Author(s)=Jack Bilmes;  
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|Author(s)=Jack Bilmes;
|Title=The Structure of Meaning in Talk: Explorations in Category AnalysisVolume I: Co-categorization, Contrast, and Hierarchy.
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|Title=The Structure of Meaning in Talk: Explorations in Category Analysis, Volume I: Co-categorization, Contrast, and Hierarchy
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Meaning; Membership Categorization Analysis; Conversation Analysis; Ethnomethodology; Occasioned Semantics;
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Meaning; Membership Categorization Analysis; Conversation Analysis; Ethnomethodology; Occasioned Semantics;
 
|Key=Bilmes2015
 
|Key=Bilmes2015
 
|Year=2015
 
|Year=2015
|Howpublished=PDF, freely available (see URL)
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|URL=http://www2.hawaii.edu/~bilmes/structure_of_meaning.pdf
|URL=http://www2.hawaii.edu/~bilmes
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|Abstract=This monograph represents most of the work that I have so far done in occasioned semantics, which is an attempt to analyze meaning structures in recorded, transcribed talk in a systematic way. As presently conceived, occasioned semantics deals with co- categorization and contrast, hierarchy (inclusiveness and subsumption), and scaling in actual talk. My work on categorical hierarchy, co-categorization, and contrast, as represented in taxonomic form, is rather more advanced than my work on scaling, so this volume is devoted to taxonomic relations. (I am planning eventually to produce a second volume, devoted to scaling.)  Following Harvey Sacks approach to category analysis, I attend to how categories are invoked, constructed, and used on particular occasions, with constant attention to the here-and-now, sequential and indexical properties of the talk. So, the taxonomies (and, eventually, scales) that I deal with are occasioned taxonomies (and occasioned scales).
 
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Latest revision as of 11:24, 17 March 2016

Bilmes2015
BibType BOOK
Key Bilmes2015
Author(s) Jack Bilmes
Title The Structure of Meaning in Talk: Explorations in Category Analysis, Volume I: Co-categorization, Contrast, and Hierarchy
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Meaning, Membership Categorization Analysis, Conversation Analysis, Ethnomethodology, Occasioned Semantics
Publisher
Year 2015
Language
City
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages
URL Link
DOI
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This monograph represents most of the work that I have so far done in occasioned semantics, which is an attempt to analyze meaning structures in recorded, transcribed talk in a systematic way. As presently conceived, occasioned semantics deals with co- categorization and contrast, hierarchy (inclusiveness and subsumption), and scaling in actual talk. My work on categorical hierarchy, co-categorization, and contrast, as represented in taxonomic form, is rather more advanced than my work on scaling, so this volume is devoted to taxonomic relations. (I am planning eventually to produce a second volume, devoted to scaling.) Following Harvey Sacks approach to category analysis, I attend to how categories are invoked, constructed, and used on particular occasions, with constant attention to the here-and-now, sequential and indexical properties of the talk. So, the taxonomies (and, eventually, scales) that I deal with are occasioned taxonomies (and occasioned scales).

Notes