Difference between revisions of "Davitti2019"

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(Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=ARTICLE |Author(s)=Elena Davitti; |Title=Methodological explorations of interpreter-mediated interaction: novel insights from multimodal analysis |Tag(s)=...")
 
 
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|Volume=19
 
|Volume=19
 
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|Number=1
|Pages=7  –29
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|Pages=7–29
|DOI=i.org/10.1177/1468794118761492
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|URL=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1468794118761492
|Abstract=Abstract
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|DOI=10.1177/1468794118761492
Research in Dialogue Interpreting (DI) has traditionally drawn on qualitative analysis of verbal  
+
|Abstract=Research in Dialogue Interpreting (DI) has traditionally drawn on qualitative analysis of verbal behaviour to explore the complex dynamics of these ‘triadic’ exchanges. Less attention has been paid to interpreter-mediated interaction as a situated, embodied activity where resources other than talk (such as gaze, gestures, head and body movement, proxemics) play a central role in the co-construction of the communicative event. This article argues that understanding the complexity of DI requires careful investigation of the interplay between multiple interactional resources, i.e. verbal in conjunction with visual, aural, embodied and spatial meaning-making resources. This call for methodological innovation is strengthened by the emergence of video-mediated interpreting, where interacting via screens without sharing the same physical space adds a further layer of complexity to interactional dynamics. Drawing on authentic extracts from interpreter-mediated interaction, both face-to-face and video-mediated, this article problematizes how the integration of a multimodal perspective into qualitative investigation of interpreter-mediated interaction can contribute to the advancement of our understanding of key interactional dynamics in DI and, in turn, broaden the scope of multimodality to include new, uncharted territory.
behaviour to explore the complex dynamics of these ‘triadic’ exchanges. Less attention has been  
 
paid to interpreter-mediated interaction as a situated, embodied activity where resources other  
 
than talk (such as gaze, gestures, head and body movement, proxemics) play a central role in the  
 
co-construction of the communicative event. This article argues that understanding the complexity  
 
of DI requires careful investigation of the interplay between multiple interactional resources, i.e.  
 
verbal in conjunction with visual, aural, embodied and spatial meaning-making resources. This call  
 
for methodological innovation is strengthened by the emergence of video-mediated interpreting,  
 
where interacting via screens without sharing the same physical space adds a further layer of  
 
complexity to interactional dynamics. Drawing on authentic extracts from interpreter-mediated  
 
interaction, both face-to-face and video-mediated, this article problematizes how the integration  
 
of a multimodal perspective into qualitative investigation of interpreter-mediated interaction can  
 
contribute to the advancement of our understanding of key interactional dynamics in DI and, in  
 
turn, broaden the scope of multimodality to include new, uncharted territory.
 
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 02:49, 19 January 2020

Davitti2019
BibType ARTICLE
Key Davitti2019
Author(s) Elena Davitti
Title Methodological explorations of interpreter-mediated interaction: novel insights from multimodal analysis
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, dialogue interpreting, face-to-face interaction, methodology, multimodal analysis, video- mediated interpreting
Publisher
Year 2019
Language English
City
Month
Journal Qualitative Research
Volume 19
Number 1
Pages 7–29
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/1468794118761492
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Research in Dialogue Interpreting (DI) has traditionally drawn on qualitative analysis of verbal behaviour to explore the complex dynamics of these ‘triadic’ exchanges. Less attention has been paid to interpreter-mediated interaction as a situated, embodied activity where resources other than talk (such as gaze, gestures, head and body movement, proxemics) play a central role in the co-construction of the communicative event. This article argues that understanding the complexity of DI requires careful investigation of the interplay between multiple interactional resources, i.e. verbal in conjunction with visual, aural, embodied and spatial meaning-making resources. This call for methodological innovation is strengthened by the emergence of video-mediated interpreting, where interacting via screens without sharing the same physical space adds a further layer of complexity to interactional dynamics. Drawing on authentic extracts from interpreter-mediated interaction, both face-to-face and video-mediated, this article problematizes how the integration of a multimodal perspective into qualitative investigation of interpreter-mediated interaction can contribute to the advancement of our understanding of key interactional dynamics in DI and, in turn, broaden the scope of multimodality to include new, uncharted territory.

Notes