Difference between revisions of "Reynolds2021"

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(Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=INCOLLECTION |Author(s)=Edward Reynolds; |Title=Emotional intensity as a resource for moral assessments |Editor(s)=Ann Weatherall; Jessica S Robles; |Tag(s...")
 
 
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|BibType=INCOLLECTION
 
|BibType=INCOLLECTION
 
|Author(s)=Edward Reynolds;
 
|Author(s)=Edward Reynolds;
|Title=Emotional intensity as a resource for moral assessments
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|Title=Emotional intensity as a resource for moral assessments: The action of ‘incitement’ in sports settings
|Editor(s)=Ann Weatherall; Jessica S Robles;
+
|Editor(s)=Ann Weatherall; Jessica S. Robles;
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA;
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA;
 
|Key=Reynolds2021
 
|Key=Reynolds2021
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|Language=English
 
|Language=English
 
|Chapter=1
 
|Chapter=1
|Month=May
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|Address=Amsterdam
 
|Booktitle=How Emotions Are Made in Talk
 
|Booktitle=How Emotions Are Made in Talk
 
|Volume=321
 
|Volume=321
|Pages=27
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|Pages=27–50
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|URL=https://benjamins.com/catalog/pbns.321.01rey
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|DOI=10.1075/pbns.321.01rey
 
|Abstract=In interaction we take it that we should act with a certain appropriate degree of involvement with an activity–that is, one can ‘party hard’, but not ‘tea party hard’. To rephrase a common saying, it is not whether you win or lose but how you are seen as playing the game. To highlight this, the current chapter examines one form of encouragement in sports, highlighting the way in which’arousal’is constituted to be used as resource in interaction. Specifically, it describes incitement, used by participants to enact a normative moral frame of ‘effort’in the course of an embodied sporting conduct. Contributing to Discursive Psychology’s program of research respecifying emotion as a member’s concern this chapter highlights the way in which participants treat proper amounts of arousal as a competitive resource in order to enact norms of effort in sporting settings.
 
|Abstract=In interaction we take it that we should act with a certain appropriate degree of involvement with an activity–that is, one can ‘party hard’, but not ‘tea party hard’. To rephrase a common saying, it is not whether you win or lose but how you are seen as playing the game. To highlight this, the current chapter examines one form of encouragement in sports, highlighting the way in which’arousal’is constituted to be used as resource in interaction. Specifically, it describes incitement, used by participants to enact a normative moral frame of ‘effort’in the course of an embodied sporting conduct. Contributing to Discursive Psychology’s program of research respecifying emotion as a member’s concern this chapter highlights the way in which participants treat proper amounts of arousal as a competitive resource in order to enact norms of effort in sporting settings.
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 04:49, 26 August 2021

Reynolds2021
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Reynolds2021
Author(s) Edward Reynolds
Title Emotional intensity as a resource for moral assessments: The action of ‘incitement’ in sports settings
Editor(s) Ann Weatherall, Jessica S. Robles
Tag(s) EMCA
Publisher John Benjamins
Year 2021
Language English
City Amsterdam
Month
Journal
Volume 321
Number
Pages 27–50
URL Link
DOI 10.1075/pbns.321.01rey
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title How Emotions Are Made in Talk
Chapter 1

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Abstract

In interaction we take it that we should act with a certain appropriate degree of involvement with an activity–that is, one can ‘party hard’, but not ‘tea party hard’. To rephrase a common saying, it is not whether you win or lose but how you are seen as playing the game. To highlight this, the current chapter examines one form of encouragement in sports, highlighting the way in which’arousal’is constituted to be used as resource in interaction. Specifically, it describes incitement, used by participants to enact a normative moral frame of ‘effort’in the course of an embodied sporting conduct. Contributing to Discursive Psychology’s program of research respecifying emotion as a member’s concern this chapter highlights the way in which participants treat proper amounts of arousal as a competitive resource in order to enact norms of effort in sporting settings.

Notes