Difference between revisions of "Schegloff1977"

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|DOI=10.2307/413107
 
|DOI=10.2307/413107
 
|Note=[[John Heritage]] adds this to the list on [[Affiliation]] saying: "Most of the older preference literature is about affiliation in a broad sense, see for example [big list of work more directly on affiliation] ... Insofar as a lot of the basic work on repair is concerned with describing practices for the avoidance of (overt) other correction, then the same holds there"
 
|Note=[[John Heritage]] adds this to the list on [[Affiliation]] saying: "Most of the older preference literature is about affiliation in a broad sense, see for example [big list of work more directly on affiliation] ... Insofar as a lot of the basic work on repair is concerned with describing practices for the avoidance of (overt) other correction, then the same holds there"
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|Abstract=An 'organization of repair' operates in conversation, addressed to recurrent problems in speaking, hearing, and understanding. Several features of that organization are introduced to explicate the mechanism which produces a strong empirical skewing in which self-repair predominates over other-repair, and to show the operation of a preference for self-repair in the organization of repair. Several consequences of the preference for self-repair for conversational interaction are sketched.
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 01:17, 12 February 2016

Schegloff1977
BibType ARTICLE
Key Schegloff1977
Author(s) Emanuel A Schegloff, Gail Jefferson, Harvey Sacks
Title The Preference for Self-Correction in the Organization of Repair in Conversation
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Repair, Affiliation, Self-repair
Publisher
Year 1977
Language
City
Month
Journal Language
Volume 53
Number 2
Pages 361–382
URL Link
DOI 10.2307/413107
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

An 'organization of repair' operates in conversation, addressed to recurrent problems in speaking, hearing, and understanding. Several features of that organization are introduced to explicate the mechanism which produces a strong empirical skewing in which self-repair predominates over other-repair, and to show the operation of a preference for self-repair in the organization of repair. Several consequences of the preference for self-repair for conversational interaction are sketched.

Notes

John Heritage adds this to the list on Affiliation saying: "Most of the older preference literature is about affiliation in a broad sense, see for example [big list of work more directly on affiliation] ... Insofar as a lot of the basic work on repair is concerned with describing practices for the avoidance of (overt) other correction, then the same holds there"