Difference between revisions of "Hofstetter-Stokoe2015"

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|Author(s)=Emily Hofstetter; Elisabeth Stokoe;
 
|Author(s)=Emily Hofstetter; Elisabeth Stokoe;
 
|Title=Offers of assistance in politician–constituent interaction
 
|Title=Offers of assistance in politician–constituent interaction
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Constituency work; conversation analysis; offers; politicians; political discourse;
+
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Constituency work; conversation analysis; offers; politicians; political discourse; offers
 
|Key=Hofstetter-Stokoe2015
 
|Key=Hofstetter-Stokoe2015
 
|Year=2015
 
|Year=2015
 +
|Language=English
 
|Journal=Discourse Studies
 
|Journal=Discourse Studies
 
|Volume=17
 
|Volume=17
 
|Number=6
 
|Number=6
 
|Pages=724–751
 
|Pages=724–751
|URL=http://dis.sagepub.com/content/17/6/724
+
|URL=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1461445615602376
 
|DOI=10.1177/1461445615602376
 
|DOI=10.1177/1461445615602376
 +
|Note=An Erratum to this paper was later published in Discourse Studies 18(2) 242–245 2016: pp. 242–245
 
|Abstract=How do politicians engage with and offer to assist their constituents: the people who vote them into power? We address the question by analysing a corpus of 80 interactions recorded at the office of a Member of Parliament (MP) in the United Kingdom, and comprising telephone calls between constituents and the MP’s clerical ‘caseworkers’ as well as face-to-face encounters with MPs in their fortnightly ‘surgeries’. The data were transcribed, and then analysed using conversation analysis, focusing on the design and placement of offers of assistance. We identified three types of offers within a longer ‘offering’ sequence: (1) ‘proposal offers’, which typically appear first in any offering sequence, in which politicians and caseworkers make proposals to help their constituents using formats that request permission to do so, or check that the constituent does indeed want help (e.g. ‘do you want me to’; ‘we could …’); (2) ‘announcement offers’, which appear second, and indicate that something has been decided and confirm the intention to act (e.g. ‘I will do X’) and (3) ‘request offers’, which appear third, and take for form ‘let me do X’. Request offers indicate that the offer is vailable but cannot be completed until the current conversation is closed; they also appear in environments in which the constituent reissues their problems and appears dissatisfied with the offers so far. The article contributes to what we know about making offers in institutional settings, as well as shedding the first empirical light on the workings of the constituency office: the site of engagement between everyday members of the public and their elected representatives.
 
|Abstract=How do politicians engage with and offer to assist their constituents: the people who vote them into power? We address the question by analysing a corpus of 80 interactions recorded at the office of a Member of Parliament (MP) in the United Kingdom, and comprising telephone calls between constituents and the MP’s clerical ‘caseworkers’ as well as face-to-face encounters with MPs in their fortnightly ‘surgeries’. The data were transcribed, and then analysed using conversation analysis, focusing on the design and placement of offers of assistance. We identified three types of offers within a longer ‘offering’ sequence: (1) ‘proposal offers’, which typically appear first in any offering sequence, in which politicians and caseworkers make proposals to help their constituents using formats that request permission to do so, or check that the constituent does indeed want help (e.g. ‘do you want me to’; ‘we could …’); (2) ‘announcement offers’, which appear second, and indicate that something has been decided and confirm the intention to act (e.g. ‘I will do X’) and (3) ‘request offers’, which appear third, and take for form ‘let me do X’. Request offers indicate that the offer is vailable but cannot be completed until the current conversation is closed; they also appear in environments in which the constituent reissues their problems and appears dissatisfied with the offers so far. The article contributes to what we know about making offers in institutional settings, as well as shedding the first empirical light on the workings of the constituency office: the site of engagement between everyday members of the public and their elected representatives.
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 10:12, 15 December 2019

Hofstetter-Stokoe2015
BibType ARTICLE
Key Hofstetter-Stokoe2015
Author(s) Emily Hofstetter, Elisabeth Stokoe
Title Offers of assistance in politician–constituent interaction
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Constituency work, conversation analysis, offers, politicians, political discourse, offers
Publisher
Year 2015
Language English
City
Month
Journal Discourse Studies
Volume 17
Number 6
Pages 724–751
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/1461445615602376
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

How do politicians engage with and offer to assist their constituents: the people who vote them into power? We address the question by analysing a corpus of 80 interactions recorded at the office of a Member of Parliament (MP) in the United Kingdom, and comprising telephone calls between constituents and the MP’s clerical ‘caseworkers’ as well as face-to-face encounters with MPs in their fortnightly ‘surgeries’. The data were transcribed, and then analysed using conversation analysis, focusing on the design and placement of offers of assistance. We identified three types of offers within a longer ‘offering’ sequence: (1) ‘proposal offers’, which typically appear first in any offering sequence, in which politicians and caseworkers make proposals to help their constituents using formats that request permission to do so, or check that the constituent does indeed want help (e.g. ‘do you want me to’; ‘we could …’); (2) ‘announcement offers’, which appear second, and indicate that something has been decided and confirm the intention to act (e.g. ‘I will do X’) and (3) ‘request offers’, which appear third, and take for form ‘let me do X’. Request offers indicate that the offer is vailable but cannot be completed until the current conversation is closed; they also appear in environments in which the constituent reissues their problems and appears dissatisfied with the offers so far. The article contributes to what we know about making offers in institutional settings, as well as shedding the first empirical light on the workings of the constituency office: the site of engagement between everyday members of the public and their elected representatives.

Notes

An Erratum to this paper was later published in Discourse Studies 18(2) 242–245 2016: pp. 242–245