Difference between revisions of "Ashmore2004"

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(Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=ARTICLE |Author(s)=Malcom Ashmore; Katie MacMillan; Steven D Brown |Title=It’s a scream: professional hearing and tape fetishism |Tag(s)=EMCA; |Key=Ashm...")
 
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|Author(s)=Malcom Ashmore; Katie MacMillan; Steven D Brown
 
|Author(s)=Malcom Ashmore; Katie MacMillan; Steven D Brown
 
|Title=It’s a scream: professional hearing and tape fetishism
 
|Title=It’s a scream: professional hearing and tape fetishism
|Tag(s)=EMCA;  
+
|Tag(s)=EMCA;
 
|Key=Ashmore2004
 
|Key=Ashmore2004
 
|Year=2004
 
|Year=2004
 
|Journal=Journal of Pragmatics
 
|Journal=Journal of Pragmatics
 
|Volume=36
 
|Volume=36
|Pages=349 -374
+
|Number=2
 +
|Pages=349–374
 +
|URL=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378216603000055
 +
|DOI=10.1016/S0378-2166(03)00005-5
 +
|Abstract=This paper addresses the roles of taping and tapes in the arenas of academic Conversation and Discourse Analysis, and in a recent American trial of therapists which constituted a major development in the Recovered Memory/False Memory debate. Our argument is that two seemingly opposed features of the practice of hearing tapes—tape fetishism and professional hearing—are in fact interdependent. By tape fetishism we mean the treatment of the tape as a direct and evidential record of a past event, and thus as a quasi-magical time machine. Professional hearing is a trained method of hearing—as developed, for example, in conversation analysis. The joint operation of these features prevents us from seeing that all hearings are mediated, and that their reports are interpretative. The paper sets out to analyze modes of mediation: the analytic glossing of voiced but non-linguistic sounds (laughing, crying, screaming) and the use of rhetorical descriptions in media reports of taped sounds.
 
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Revision as of 03:24, 16 February 2016

Ashmore2004
BibType ARTICLE
Key Ashmore2004
Author(s) Malcom Ashmore, Katie MacMillan, Steven D Brown
Title It’s a scream: professional hearing and tape fetishism
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA
Publisher
Year 2004
Language
City
Month
Journal Journal of Pragmatics
Volume 36
Number 2
Pages 349–374
URL Link
DOI 10.1016/S0378-2166(03)00005-5
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This paper addresses the roles of taping and tapes in the arenas of academic Conversation and Discourse Analysis, and in a recent American trial of therapists which constituted a major development in the Recovered Memory/False Memory debate. Our argument is that two seemingly opposed features of the practice of hearing tapes—tape fetishism and professional hearing—are in fact interdependent. By tape fetishism we mean the treatment of the tape as a direct and evidential record of a past event, and thus as a quasi-magical time machine. Professional hearing is a trained method of hearing—as developed, for example, in conversation analysis. The joint operation of these features prevents us from seeing that all hearings are mediated, and that their reports are interpretative. The paper sets out to analyze modes of mediation: the analytic glossing of voiced but non-linguistic sounds (laughing, crying, screaming) and the use of rhetorical descriptions in media reports of taped sounds.

Notes