Difference between revisions of "Arminen2021"
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|Title=Expertise in interaction – Introduction | |Title=Expertise in interaction – Introduction | ||
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Expertise; Epistemics | |Tag(s)=EMCA; Expertise; Epistemics | ||
− | |Key= | + | |Key=Arminen2021a |
|Year=2021 | |Year=2021 | ||
|Language=English | |Language=English |
Latest revision as of 10:58, 9 November 2021
Arminen2021 | |
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BibType | ARTICLE |
Key | Arminen2021a |
Author(s) | Ilkka Arminen, Tom Koole, Mika Simonen |
Title | Expertise in interaction – Introduction |
Editor(s) | |
Tag(s) | EMCA, Expertise, Epistemics |
Publisher | |
Year | 2021 |
Language | English |
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Month | |
Journal | Discourse Studies |
Volume | 23 |
Number | 5 |
Pages | 573-576 |
URL | Link |
DOI | 10.1177/14614456211015745 |
ISBN | |
Organization | |
Institution | |
School | |
Type | |
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Abstract
The articles selected for this Special Issue are based on presentations at the panel on Knowledge and Expertise in Interaction in IIEMCA, Mannheim, 2–5 July 2019, and in the Expertise workshop, Helsinki, 12–13 December 2019. The special issue is also a part of a long standing interest of Discourse Studies on Epistemic issues, started with a theme issue on Epistemic Discourse Analysis (van Dijk, 2013), followed by Evidential and Epistemic Strategies (González, 2015), Epistemics of Epistemics (Lynch and Macbeth, 2016), and Epistemics – the Rebuttal (Drew, 2018). This theme issue deals with expertise in interaction, how parties orient to expertise, and also how expertise is procedurally relevant and consequential for interactants. Interest in expertise in interaction is not novel; orientations to skills, organizations and knowing-how have been a continuous topic of ethnomethodological (EM) and conversation analysis (CA) studies since their beginning. However, mostly expertise has not been topicalized as such: it has remained a briefly mentioned undercurrent in studies of expert interactional practices, or more recently, a transient side topic of epistemics. In this theme issue the contributors try to tease out the role of expertise for interaction. We propose that we are seeing the first wobbly steps in the systematic study of expertise in interaction. At times, the contributions utilize purposefully the existing framework of epistemics to explore the ways in which parties in interaction adjust and reshape their actions and understandings according to their sense of what their expertise is and their orientations to other participants’ expertise. Sometimes they connect the studies to other existing fields, such as deontics; sometimes they just enter into new territories.
Notes