Difference between revisions of "Llewellyn2009"

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|Author(s)=Nick Llewellyn; Laura Spence
 
|Author(s)=Nick Llewellyn; Laura Spence
 
|Title=Practice as a Members' Phenomenon
 
|Title=Practice as a Members' Phenomenon
|Tag(s)=conversation analysis; ethnomethodology; job interviews; practice; recruitment; reflexivity
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|Tag(s)=EMCA; conversation analysis; ethnomethodology; job interviews; practice; recruitment; reflexivity;
 
|Key=Llewellyn2009
 
|Key=Llewellyn2009
 
|Year=2009
 
|Year=2009
 +
|Language=English
 
|Journal=Organization Studies
 
|Journal=Organization Studies
 
|Volume=30
 
|Volume=30

Revision as of 04:27, 21 November 2017

Llewellyn2009
BibType ARTICLE
Key Llewellyn2009
Author(s) Nick Llewellyn, Laura Spence
Title Practice as a Members' Phenomenon
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, conversation analysis, ethnomethodology, job interviews, practice, recruitment, reflexivity
Publisher
Year 2009
Language English
City
Month
Journal Organization Studies
Volume 30
Number 12
Pages 1419–1439
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/0170840609349877
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Drawing on ethnomethodology and conversation analysis, this article explores the relation between practice and activity; between recruitment practice and the ordinary activities of the job interview. Job interviews are recognizably and accountably different from other interview-formats, such as broadcast news or academic research interviews. Such differences are instantly hearable because ordinary activities are built systematically so as to reveal an orientation to ‘practice’, distinctive purposes, entitlements, presuppositions, identities and definitions of acceptable conduct. The article illustrates analytic procedures for recovering such orientations and thus for understanding how people embed and reveal practice, with and for one another, in interaction. It is argued that the practice-turn should not overlook the fact that practice is, in the first instance, a members’ phenomenon, something that members draw upon, monitor and orient to in real time interaction.

Notes