Wooffitt2022

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Wooffitt2022
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Wooffitt2022
Author(s) Robin Wooffitt, Darren Reed, Jessica A. Young, Clare Jackson
Title The Poetics in Jefferson's Poetics Lecture
Editor(s) Raymond F. Person Jr., Robin Wooffitt, John P. Rae
Tag(s) EMCA
Publisher Routledge
Year 2022
Language English
City New York
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Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 97–116
URL Link
DOI 10.4324/9780429328930-6
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Bridging the Gap Between Conversation Analysis and Poetics: Studies in Talk-In-Interaction and Literature Twenty-Five Years after Jefferson
Chapter

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Abstract

In this chapter we analyze the video of Jefferson’s lecture in 1977 on the poetics of ordinary conversation, presented at the 1977 Boston University Conference on Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis. The analysis focuses on poetic phenomena that inform her talk on conversational poetics, a reflexive twist that we consider to be in the broad spirit of Jefferson’s recognition of the wild side of Conversation Analysis. The analysis focuses on three phenomena. First, there is examination of a sound-run that seems to cluster in an early part of her talk, and which seems on occasion to have a determinative effect on word-selection. Second, we examine short-form poetics: momentary spates of talk that seem to exhibit an organization similar to formal poetics, be it in terms of length, tempo, word-choice, and so on. Finally, we examine a formal poetic organization—a clerihew—that informs part of her response to a question from the audience. We argue that poetic phenomena of the sort examined and exhibited by Jefferson deserve greater social scientific attention than they have hitherto received, and that her work merits comparison to work on poetics by Jacobson and Hymes.

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