Difference between revisions of "Robles2015"
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|Year=2015 | |Year=2015 | ||
|Journal=Journal of Language and Social Psychology | |Journal=Journal of Language and Social Psychology | ||
− | |URL=http://jls.sagepub.com/content/ | + | |Volume=34 |
+ | |Number=4 | ||
+ | |Pages=390–409 | ||
+ | |URL=http://jls.sagepub.com/content/34/4/390 | ||
|DOI=10.1177/0261927X15586573 | |DOI=10.1177/0261927X15586573 | ||
− | |||
|Abstract=This article investigates the interactional organization of racism through participant production and uptake of explicit racial membership categories across a corpus of 50+ hours of audio-/video-recorded interaction in three U.S. states. The discourse analysis examines one participant method for addressing “hearably racist” talk: echoing extreme versions of the problematic utterance to provide opportunities for repair work on inferable associations between membership categories and category-bound activities. Orienting to implicit inferential material as the source of trouble licenses participant account-seeking; treating the racism as a repairable downgrades its status as an overt instance of racism. | |Abstract=This article investigates the interactional organization of racism through participant production and uptake of explicit racial membership categories across a corpus of 50+ hours of audio-/video-recorded interaction in three U.S. states. The discourse analysis examines one participant method for addressing “hearably racist” talk: echoing extreme versions of the problematic utterance to provide opportunities for repair work on inferable associations between membership categories and category-bound activities. Orienting to implicit inferential material as the source of trouble licenses participant account-seeking; treating the racism as a repairable downgrades its status as an overt instance of racism. | ||
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Revision as of 03:06, 17 March 2016
Robles2015 | |
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BibType | ARTICLE |
Key | Robles2015 |
Author(s) | Jessica S. Robles |
Title | Extreme Case (Re)formulation as a Practice for Making Hearably Racist Talk Repairable |
Editor(s) | |
Tag(s) | EMCA, Racism, Membership Categorization, Repair, Extreme Case Formulations |
Publisher | |
Year | 2015 |
Language | |
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Month | |
Journal | Journal of Language and Social Psychology |
Volume | 34 |
Number | 4 |
Pages | 390–409 |
URL | Link |
DOI | 10.1177/0261927X15586573 |
ISBN | |
Organization | |
Institution | |
School | |
Type | |
Edition | |
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Abstract
This article investigates the interactional organization of racism through participant production and uptake of explicit racial membership categories across a corpus of 50+ hours of audio-/video-recorded interaction in three U.S. states. The discourse analysis examines one participant method for addressing “hearably racist” talk: echoing extreme versions of the problematic utterance to provide opportunities for repair work on inferable associations between membership categories and category-bound activities. Orienting to implicit inferential material as the source of trouble licenses participant account-seeking; treating the racism as a repairable downgrades its status as an overt instance of racism.
Notes