Home Page Icon
Home Page
Table of Contents for
Title page
Close
Title page
by Tanya Stivers, Jack Sidnell
The Handbook of Conversation Analysis
Cover
Blackwell Handbooks in Linguistics
Title page
Copyright page
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgments
1 Introduction
1 Introduction
2 CA in Relation to Other Approaches to Language Use and Social Interaction
3 The Interdisciplinary Nature of CA
4 The Institutionalization of CA
5 Goals and Organization of the Volume
6 Conclusion
Part I: Studying Social Interaction from a CA Perspective
2 Everyone and No One to Turn to: Intellectual Roots and Contexts for Conversation Analysis
1 Introduction
2 Ethnomethodology
3 Goffmanian Sociology
4 Scholarship in Greek Oral Culture
5 Philosophy
6 Linguistics
7 Ethnography, Anthropology, Sociolinguistics
8 Conclusions
3 The Conversation Analytic Approach to Data Collection
1 Introduction
2 Why Record Naturally Occurring Social Interactions?
3 The Diversity of Data Within CA
4 Technological Devices for Data Collection
5 Collecting Data for Analysis: Preserving and Making Phenomena Accessible
6 Conclusions
4 The Conversation Analytic Approach to Transcription
1 Introduction
2 Transcription Conventions
3 Transcribing Talk in Languages Other Than English
4 Transcribing Visible Conduct
5 Concerns With the CA Approach to Transcription
6 Conclusions
5 Basic Conversation Analytic Methods
1 Introduction
2 Interaction as an Object of Study: Methodological Preliminaries
3 Steps in Developing an Analysis
4 Conclusions
Part II: Fundamental Structures of Conversation
6 Action Formation and Ascription
1 Introduction
2 Background: Language As Action in Sociology and Other Disciplines
3 Granularity of Action Description
4 Sequence Organization and Action Ascription
5 Action Formation and Turn Design
6 Action Formatting vs. Content-Defined Practices
7 Multiple Actions in One Turn
8 Actions vs. Projects
9 Action Types: Issues of Level and Inventory—Granularity Revisited
10 Cross-Cultural Regularities in Action Types and the Productivity of Activity Types
11 Action Streams and the Nonverbal
12 Bringing It All Together: the Distributed Nature of Action Coding
13 Future Directions
7 Turn Design
1 Introduction
2 Turn Design in Sequence
3 Turn Design and Action
4 Recipient Design
5 Conclusions
8 Turn-Constructional Units and the Transition-Relevance Place
1 Introduction
2 TCU Endings and Transition-Relevance
3 Projecting Completion
4 Circumventing Turn Transition
5 Future Directions
9 Turn Allocation and Turn Sharing
1 Introduction
2 Turn Allocation
3 Overlapping Talk
4 Turn Sharing
5 Future Directions
10 Sequence Organization
1 Introduction
2 Social Action Sequences
3 Storytellings
4 Other Forms of Sequential Organization
5 Future Directions
11 Preference
1 Introduction
2 Overview of Existing Literature
3 Weaknesses and Omissions in Existing Research
4 Future Directions
12 Repair
1 Introduction
2 Self-Initiated and Other-Initiated Repair: The Distinction
3 Self-Initiated Repair in Same-TCU
4 Self-Initiated Repair Later than Same-TCU
5 Other-Initiated Repair
6 Future Directions
13 Overall Structural Organization
1 Introduction
2 Activity
3 The Overall Structural Organization of Entire, Single Occasions of Interaction
4 Future Directions
Part III: Key Topics in CA
14 Embodied Action and Organizational Activity
1 Introduction
2 The Interactional Production of a Turn-at-Talk
3 Turn Transition and Organization
4 The Expression of Troubles
5 Technologies in Action
6 Issues and Implications
7 Future Directions
15 Gaze in Conversation
1 Introduction
2 Background: The Gaze ‘Machinery’
3 Gaze ‘Machinery’ in Social Interaction
4 Future Directions
APPENDIX: Symbols for Gaze Orientation
16 Emotion, Affect and Conversation
1 Introduction
2 Emotion and Affect in Social Interaction
3 Early CA Work On Emotion
4 Emotion Displays as Consequential for Interaction
5 Emotion as a Co-constructed Interactional Resource
6 Emotion as a Vehicle in Performing Institutional Tasks
7 Displays of Emotion as an Interplay of Different Modalities: the Case of Facial Expression in Relation to Spoken Interaction
8 Conclusions
9 Future Directions
17 Affiliation in Conversation
1 Introduction
2 Resources for Displaying Affiliation
3 Affiliation in Different Activities
4 Affiliation and Epistemic Stance
5 Future Directions
APPENDIX: Morphological Gloss Abbreviations
18 Epistemics in Conversation
1 Introduction
2 Background
3 Epistemic Stance and Epistemic Status
4 Managing the Boundaries of Epistemic Domains
5 Epistemics and Action Formation
6 Epistemics and Sequence Organization
7 Conclusions
8 Directions for Future Research
19 Question Design in Conversation
1 Introduction
2 Questions
3 Questioning and the Epistemic Gradient
4 Presuppositions, Agenda Setting and Preferences
5 Social Actions Implemented by Questions
6 Questions as Building Blocks of Institutional Activities
7 Future Directions
20 Response Design in Conversation
1 Introduction
2 Answers and Nonanswer Responses
3 Preference: Actions and Forms of Responses
4 Responses to Wh-Questions
5 Responses to Polar Questions
6 Visible Responses
7 Future Directions
21 Reference in Conversation
1 Introduction
2 Lexical Selection in Reference: Introductory Examples of Reference to Times
3 Multiple ‘Preferences’
4 Future Directions
5 Conclusion
22 Phonetics and Prosody in Conversation
1 Introduction
2 Analytic Principles
3 Outcomes
4 Transcription
5 Future Directions
23 Grammar in Conversation
1 Introduction
2 Grammatical Forms As Practices for Organizing Talk in Interaction
3 Positionally Sensitive Grammars of Turn-Constructional Units and Turns
4 Action Formation and the Grammar of Clausal TCUs
5 The Contextualizing Function of Nonclausal Turn-Constructional Designs
6 Future Directions
24 Storytelling in Conversation
1 Introduction
2 Storytelling and Turn-by-Turn Talk
3 How Prospective Tellers Launch Storytellings
4 How Tellers Shape Recipient Response
5 How Recipients Respond to Storytellings
6 Recipient Responses via Body Behavior
7 Recipient Disruption of Storytelling
8 How Tellers Use Storytellings to Produce Actions
9 How Tellers end Storytellings
10 Future Directions
Part IV: Key Contexts of Study in CA: Populations and Settings
25 Interaction among Children
1 Introduction
2 Sacks and Children
3 CA Work on Children Since Sacks
4 Data and Methodological Considerations
5 A Problem-Remedy Sequence
6 Object Presentations
7 An Embodied Action and Its Remedy
8 Conclusions and Future Directions
26 Conversation Analysis and the Study of Atypical Populations
1 Introduction
2 Atypical Language, Speech or Hearing
3 Atypical Cognitive Powers
4 Atypical Beliefs
5 Concluding Comments
6 Future Directions
27 Conversation Analysis in Psychotherapy
1 Introduction
2 Working Sequentially with Understandings
3 History
4 Key Practices
5 Relational Aspects of Practices
6 Future Directions
28 Conversation Analysis in Medicine
1 Introduction
2 Streams of Research in Medical CA
3 Activities, Actions and Dilemmas in Doctor-Patient Interaction
4 Future Directions in Medical CA
29 Conversation Analysis in the Classroom
1 Introduction
2 Practices in Classroom Interaction
3 Learning in Classroom Interaction
4 Future Directions
30 Conversation Analysis in the Courtroom
1 Introduction
2 Talk Designed for an Overhearing Audience
3 Common-Sense Reasoning
4 Turn-by-Turn Organization
5 Conclusions: The Courtroom Context
6 Future Directions
31 Conversation Analysis in the News Interview
1 Introduction
2 Turn-Taking: The System and Its Practices
3 Orienting to the Audience
4 Question Design and Journalistic Norms: neutralism
5 Question Design and Journalistic Norms: Adversarialness
6 Designing Answers: Responsive and Resistant
7 Openings and Closings
8 News Interview Genres
9 Quantitative Extensions
10 Future Directions
Part V: CA across the Disciplines
32 Conversation Analysis and Sociology
1 Introduction
2 The Emergence of CA in Sociology
3 Conversation Analysis as Sociology: Toward a Sociology of Interaction
4 Conversation Analysis in Sociology
5 Future Directions
33 Conversation Analysis and Communication
1 Introduction
2 Communication Research Background
3 Moving from Interpersonal to Relational Communication
4 CA’s Emergence into Communication
5 Future Directions
34 Conversation Analysis and Anthropology
1 Introduction
2 Anthropology’s Influence on CA
3 CA’s Influence on Anthropology
4 Future Directions
35 Conversation Analysis and Psychology
1 Introduction
2 CA’s Position on Mental Life
3 Cognition, Cognitivism and Method
4 CA as the Basis for an Alternative Psychological Program
5 CA as a Resource for Identifying Classical Cognitive Objects
6 CA and Psychological Method
7 Conclusions: Conversation and Cognition
36 Conversation Analysis and Linguistics
1 Brief History of CA and Linguistics
2 CA Informing Linguistics
3 Contributions of Linguistics to CA
4 Cross-Fertilization between CA and IL
5 Challenges Facing IL
6 Conclusions
References
Names Index
Topic Index
Search in book...
Toggle Font Controls
Playlists
Add To
Create new playlist
Name your new playlist
Playlist description (optional)
Cancel
Create playlist
Sign In
Email address
Password
Forgot Password?
Create account
Login
or
Continue with Facebook
Continue with Google
Sign Up
Full Name
Email address
Confirm Email Address
Password
Login
Create account
or
Continue with Facebook
Continue with Google
Prev
Previous Chapter
Blackwell Handbooks in Linguistics
Next
Next Chapter
Copyright page
Add Highlight
No Comment
..................Content has been hidden....................
You can't read the all page of ebook, please click
here
login for view all page.
Day Mode
Cloud Mode
Night Mode
Reset