Difference between revisions of "Harren2008"

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(Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=ARTICLE |Author(s)=Inga Harren; Mia Raitaniemi |Title=The sequential structure of closings in private German phone calls |Tag(s)=EMCA; German; Closings; Ph...")
 
 
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|Author(s)=Inga Harren; Mia Raitaniemi
 
|Author(s)=Inga Harren; Mia Raitaniemi
 
|Title=The sequential structure of closings in private German phone calls
 
|Title=The sequential structure of closings in private German phone calls
|Tag(s)=EMCA; German; Closings; Phone Calls; Sequence organization;  
+
|Tag(s)=EMCA; German; Closings; Phone Calls; Sequence organization;
 
|Key=Harren2008
 
|Key=Harren2008
 
|Year=2008
 
|Year=2008
|Journal=Gesprächsforschung - Online-Zeitschrift zur verbalen Interaktion
+
|Journal=Gesprächsforschung: Online-Zeitschrift zur verbalen Interaktion
 
|Volume=9
 
|Volume=9
|Pages=198-223
+
|Pages=198–223
|URL=https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Inga_Harren/publication/228641193_The_sequential_structure_of_closings_in_private_German_phone_calls/links/0046352404799ccf14000000.pdf
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|URL=http://www.gespraechsforschung-online.de/fileadmin/dateien/heft2008/ga-harren.pdf
|Abstract=This conversation analytic study focuses on the sequential structure of telephone
+
|Abstract=This conversation analytic study focuses on the sequential structure of telephone closings in a corpus of 28 German phone calls among friends and relatives. It ex- amines the stepwise proceeding within the closing path.
closings in a corpus of 28 German phone calls among friends and relatives. It examines
+
 
the stepwise proceeding within the closing path.
+
Fundamental prior research on closings (Schegloff/Sacks 1973) implies that, after topic closure, only a possible pre-closing and its acceptance and the following terminal exchange are necessary for a minimal closing. Contrary to that, the studied German closings show a more elaborate organization. Our findings suggest that German telephone closings consist of at least two negotiation sequences. In the first sequence, the participants negotiate whether they are ready to end the conversation. We found that besides lexical items such as "gut" ('good'), constructions such as "dann sehen wir uns morgen" ('then we’ll see each other tomorrow') can be considered as typical for this first sequence. In the second sequence the participants negotiate when terminal greetings (e.g. "tschüss" 'bye') are produced. This is preferably done by producing a series of utterances, such as "okay – bis dann – tschüss" ('okay – till then – bye'), often to some extent in overlap with the partner.
Fundamental prior research on closings (Schegloff/Sacks 1973) implies that,
+
 
after topic closure, only a possible pre-closing and its acceptance and the
+
In the literature on closings, there are attempts to categorize the turns that can occur between the initiation of the closing sequence and the terminal exchange, such as reiteration of appointments. According to Button (1987; 1990a) such turns are movements out of closing. Yet, in our German data, we found that turns referring to appointments and future actions (such as the mentioned "dann sehen wir uns morgen") contribute to the joint achievement of the closing.
following terminal exchange are necessary for a minimal closing. Contrary to that,
 
the studied German closings show a more elaborate organization. Our findings
 
suggest that German telephone closings consist of at least two negotiation
 
sequences. In the first sequence, the participants negotiate whether they are ready
 
to end the conversation. We found that besides lexical items such as "gut"
 
('good'), constructions such as "dann sehen wir uns morgen" ('then we’ll see each
 
other tomorrow') can be considered as typical for this first sequence. In the second
 
sequence the participants negotiate when terminal greetings (e.g. "tschüss" 'bye')
 
are produced. This is preferably done by producing a series of utterances, such as
 
"okay – bis dann – tschüss" ('okay – till then – bye'), often to some extent in
 
overlap with the partner.
 
In the literature on closings, there are attempts to categorize the turns that can
 
occur between the initiation of the closing sequence and the terminal exchange,
 
such as reiteration of appointments. According to Button (1987; 1990a) such turns
 
are movements out of closing. Yet, in our German data, we found that turns
 
referring to appointments and future actions (such as the mentioned "dann sehen
 
wir uns morgen") contribute to the joint achievement of the closing.  
 
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 23:40, 20 November 2019

Harren2008
BibType ARTICLE
Key Harren2008
Author(s) Inga Harren, Mia Raitaniemi
Title The sequential structure of closings in private German phone calls
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, German, Closings, Phone Calls, Sequence organization
Publisher
Year 2008
Language
City
Month
Journal Gesprächsforschung: Online-Zeitschrift zur verbalen Interaktion
Volume 9
Number
Pages 198–223
URL Link
DOI
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This conversation analytic study focuses on the sequential structure of telephone closings in a corpus of 28 German phone calls among friends and relatives. It ex- amines the stepwise proceeding within the closing path.

Fundamental prior research on closings (Schegloff/Sacks 1973) implies that, after topic closure, only a possible pre-closing and its acceptance and the following terminal exchange are necessary for a minimal closing. Contrary to that, the studied German closings show a more elaborate organization. Our findings suggest that German telephone closings consist of at least two negotiation sequences. In the first sequence, the participants negotiate whether they are ready to end the conversation. We found that besides lexical items such as "gut" ('good'), constructions such as "dann sehen wir uns morgen" ('then we’ll see each other tomorrow') can be considered as typical for this first sequence. In the second sequence the participants negotiate when terminal greetings (e.g. "tschüss" 'bye') are produced. This is preferably done by producing a series of utterances, such as "okay – bis dann – tschüss" ('okay – till then – bye'), often to some extent in overlap with the partner.

In the literature on closings, there are attempts to categorize the turns that can occur between the initiation of the closing sequence and the terminal exchange, such as reiteration of appointments. According to Button (1987; 1990a) such turns are movements out of closing. Yet, in our German data, we found that turns referring to appointments and future actions (such as the mentioned "dann sehen wir uns morgen") contribute to the joint achievement of the closing.

Notes