Raymond2013

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Raymond2013
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Raymond2013
Author(s) Geoffrey Raymond
Title At the intersection of turn and sequence organization: On the relevance of “slots” in type-conforming responses to polar interrogatives
Editor(s) Beatrice Szczepek Reed, Geoffrey Raymond
Tag(s) EMCA, Sequential organization, Turn Construction
Publisher John Benjamins
Year 2013
Language English
City Amsterdam / Philadelphia
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 169–206
URL Link
DOI 10.1075/slsi.25.06ray
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Units of Talk – Units of Action
Chapter

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Abstract

In this chapter I introduce the notion of ‘slots’ as a unit used in the composition of type-conforming responses to yes/no type interrogatives (or YNIs) in English. Specifically, I show that speakers can compose type-conforming responses by reference to two (internally organized) slots associated with the relevancies set in motion by a YNI initiating action: a [response to the interrogative] and a [response to the action] that it conveys. Examining a collection of type-conforming responses I first show that ‘slots’ can be distinguished from turn constructional units (or TCUs, Sacks et al. 1974) by establishing that variations in such responses cannot be reduced to this more familiar unit. For example, in cases where talk past a yes or no is relevant type-conforming responses can be composed of materials drawn from (at least) two distinct TCU types (one for each slot) that are packaged within a single intonation contour; in other cases, speakers can devote two TCUs to manage the relevancies associated with a single slot. Second, I describe the basic features of an ‘unmarked’ [response to interrogative] and show that a dense array of alternative actions can be composed via speaker’s alterations to one or more of the material elements used to compose it. Through these observations I illustrate how speakers adapt the material resources used to compose their turns to the relevancies posed by the sequence of action to which they contribute. That is, by focusing on variations in type-conforming responses I show how the complex obligations entailed in normatively organized social action are fulfilled in talk-in-interaction, and how the primary constituents of turn organization – grammar, prosody, and word selection – are manipulated and pressed into service on their behalf.

Notes