Difference between revisions of "Stokoe2020a"
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|Title=Conversation Analysis, Language, and Sexuality | |Title=Conversation Analysis, Language, and Sexuality | ||
|Editor(s)=Kira Hall; Rusty Barrett; | |Editor(s)=Kira Hall; Rusty Barrett; | ||
− | |Tag(s)=EMCA; Doing gender; Passing; Ethnomethodology | + | |Tag(s)=EMCA; Doing gender; Passing; Ethnomethodology |
|Key=Stokoe2020a | |Key=Stokoe2020a | ||
|Publisher=Oxford University Press | |Publisher=Oxford University Press |
Latest revision as of 03:05, 14 July 2020
Stokoe2020a | |
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BibType | ARTICLE |
Key | Stokoe2020a |
Author(s) | Elisabeth H. Stokoe, Susan A. Speer |
Title | Conversation Analysis, Language, and Sexuality |
Editor(s) | Kira Hall, Rusty Barrett |
Tag(s) | EMCA, Doing gender, Passing, Ethnomethodology |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Year | 2018 |
Language | English |
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Book title | The Oxford handbook of language and sexuality |
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Abstract
This chapter describes and illustrates a conversation analytic approach to language and sexuality. It begins by exploring contrasts between conversation analytic and other approaches to connecting language as a practice and sexuality as an identity topic. This discussion is set in a broader ethnomethodological context, drawing out key themes and debates that have emerged since the inception of ethnomethodological approaches to the study of gender and sexuality in the 1960s, including notions such as “doing” gender and sexuality and “passing.” The chapter then briefly reviews the controversial debates about the analytic tractability of identity topics, like sexuality and gender, in the conversation analytic tradition. After summarizing conversation analytic work on sexuality specifically, an illustration of what this approach offers to language and sexuality scholars is given, showing the methodological steps involved as well as the possibilities for applying findings in the real world beyond scholarly debate.
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