Difference between revisions of "WhalenZimmermanWhalen1988"

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|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|Author(s)=Jack Whalen; Don H. Zimmerman; Marilyn R Whalen;
 
|Author(s)=Jack Whalen; Don H. Zimmerman; Marilyn R Whalen;
|Title=When Words Fail: A Single Case Analysis
+
|Title=When words fail: a single case analysis
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; fail; sequence organization; telephone
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; fail; sequence organization; telephone
 
|Key=WhalenZimmermanWhalen1988
 
|Key=WhalenZimmermanWhalen1988
|Publisher=University of California Press on behalf of the Society for the Study of Social Problems
 
 
|Year=1988
 
|Year=1988
 
|Journal=Social Problems
 
|Journal=Social Problems

Revision as of 08:20, 21 October 2019

WhalenZimmermanWhalen1988
BibType ARTICLE
Key WhalenZimmermanWhalen1988
Author(s) Jack Whalen, Don H. Zimmerman, Marilyn R Whalen
Title When words fail: a single case analysis
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, fail, sequence organization, telephone
Publisher
Year 1988
Language
City
Month
Journal Social Problems
Volume 35
Number 4
Pages 335–362
URL Link
DOI 10.2307/800591
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This paper reports on research into the social organization of citizen phone calls to emergency service agencies, focusing on the constitutive function of talk in the activity of calling for help. We explore how these occasions of talk can themselves become problematic events for members. Our report centers on the detailed analysis of a single, very fateful conversation, showing how a seemingly aberrant event can be understood in terms of the natural language practices involved in its orderly, joint production by the actual parties to the call. This single case analysis also reveals when and how words can fail: it is the sequential context within which words are produced and the interactional treatment they thereby receive that is crucial for whatever status and consequences they come to have.

Notes