Gardner2010b

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Gardner2010b
BibType ARTICLE
Key Gardner2010b
Author(s) Rod Gardner
Title Question and answer sequences in Garrwa talk
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Aboriginal Conversation, Conversation Analysis, Questions and Answers, Conversational Style
Publisher
Year 2010
Language English
City
Month
Journal Australian Journal of Linguistics
Volume 30
Number 4
Pages 423–445
URL Link
DOI 10.1080/07268602.2010.518554
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
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Abstract

For question–answer sequences in Australian Aboriginal talk, it has been claimed that answers are not necessarily a required response. This would contrast with findings reported in recent cross-linguistic work on such sequences. In a corpus of 62 question sequences from conversations in two Garrwa communities on the west side of the Gulf of Carpentaria in northern Australia, 34 questions were answered, and a further 12 dealt with the question in some other way. Sixteen received no response in the proximally subsequent talk. Whilst most of these questions were answered, the offset time between question and response was long compared to previous studies. There was also a higher rate of non-answers and non-responses. For some cases of non-responses, contingent factors easily explained the lack, but in a few the reasons were not so apparent. It is argued that a significant factor in the relatively long silence between question and answer, and the relatively high rate of non-answers or non-responses, is that the parties in the talk spend much of the time in ‘continuing states of incipient talk’, rather than in tightly focused and temporally bound conversation, which may help to account for the apparent relaxation of gap minimization and response mobilization.

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