Pillet-Shore2018

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Pillet-Shore2018
BibType ARTICLE
Key Pillet-Shore2018
Author(s) Danielle Pillet-Shore
Title Arriving: expanding the personal state sequence
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Opening sequences, personal state displays
Publisher
Year 2018
Language English
City
Month
Journal Research on Language and Social Interaction
Volume 51
Number 3
Pages 232–247
URL Link
DOI 10.1080/08351813.2018.1485225
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

When arriving to a social encounter, how and when can a person show how s/he is doing/feeling? This article answers this question, examining personal state sequences in copresent openings of casual (residential) and institutional (parent-teacher) encounters. Describing a regular way participants constitute—and move to expand—these sequences, this research shows how arrivers display a nonneutral (e.g., negative, humorous, positive) personal state by both (1) deploying interactionally timed stance-marking embodiments that enact a nonneutral state, and (2) invoking a selected previous activity/experience positioned as precipitating that nonneutral state. Data demonstrate that arrivers time their nonneutral personal state displays calibrated to their understanding of their relationship with coparticipants. Analysis reveals that arrivers use this action to proffer a firsthand experience as a self-attentive first topic that works as a bid for empathy, inviting recipients to collaborate in expanding the personal state sequence and thereby cocreate an empathic moment. Data in American English.

Notes