Article In:
Interactional Linguistics: Online-First ArticlesA multimodal approach to grammatical aspect
Embedded depictions and their aspectual characteristics as interactional resources
This paper offers a multimodal approach to grammatical aspect, traditionally seen in linguistics as a
verbal-morphological category. Using conversation analysis and interactional linguistics, we take as our object of study turn
completions done with bodily movements and non-lexical vocalizations, focusing on the aspectual information they construct, and
how this information is oriented to as relevant to the trajectory of action underway. We argue that the aspectual information
constructed through the practice of completing a turn with bodily movements and non-lexical vocalizations is part of demonstrating
the speaker’s experiential knowledge relevant to the epistemic claims being made, in the service of securing some form of
affiliative uptake from the recipient regarding those claims. Pursuits designed in this way provide the recipient access to the
speaker’s “way of viewing the internal temporal constituency of [the] situation” (Comrie
1976: 3). Furthermore, we show that the aspectual information conveyed (i) by bodily movements, and (ii) co-occurring
non-lexical vocalizations, are somewhat distinct from each other. Our study is the first that we are aware of to examine the
category of grammatical aspect in turn completions and in this embodied and social-interactional way. Data are in American
English.
Keywords: aspect, grammar, morphology, epistemics, turn-taking, embodiment, multimodality
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Situating our investigation
- 2.1The (embodied) grammar of turn completions
- 2.2The (embodied) grammar of aspect
- 3.Data and methods
- 4.Multimodal aspect in action
- 4.1A first case of ‘instructing’
- 4.2Pursuits
- 5.Discussion and avenues for future research
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Author queries
-
References
This content is being prepared for publication; it may be subject to changes.
References (117)
Andersen, R. W. (1990). Verbal
virtuosity and speakers’ purposes. In H. Burmeister & P. L. Rounds (Eds.), Variability
in Second Language Acquisition: Proceedings of the tenth meeting of the second language research forum, Vol.
2 (pp. 1–24). University of Oregon Press.
Axelrod, M. (1993). The
semantics of time: Aspectual categorization in Koyukon Athabaskan. University of Nebraska Press.
Boersma, Paul & Weenink, David. (2023). Praat:
doing phonetics by computer. Version 6.3.20. [URL]
Bolden, G. B., & Mandelbaum, J. (2017). The
use of conversational co-remembering to corroborate contentious claims. Discourse
Studies, 19(1), 3–29.
(2019). Depicting
in communication. In P. Hagoort (Ed.), Human
Language: From Genes and Brains to
Behaviour (pp. 235–247). MIT Press.
Clayman, S. E., & Raymond, C. W. (2021). ‘You
know’ as invoking alignment: A generic resource for emerging problems of understanding and
affiliation. Journal of
Pragmatics,
182
1, 293–309.
Couper-Kuhlen, E., Fox, B. A., Raymond, C. W., Sorjonen, M.-L., & Thompson, S. A. (2024). Analyzing
grammar in social interaction. In J. D. Robinson, R. Clift, K. H. Kendrick, & C. W. Raymond (Eds.). The
Cambridge Handbook of Methods in Conversation
Analysis (pp. xx–xx). Cambridge University Press.
Curl, T. S. (2006). Offers
of assistance: Constraints on syntactic design. Journal of
Pragmatics,
38
1, 1257–1280.
Dahl, Ö., & Velupillai, V. (2013). Perfective/Imperfective
Aspect. In M. S. Dryer & M. Haspelmath (Eds.), WALS
Online (v2020.3).
Drew, P. (1997). “Open”
class repair initiators in response to sequential sources of trouble in conversation. Journal
of
Pragmatics,
28
1, 69–101.
(1998). Complaints
about transgressions and misconduct. Research on Language & Social
Interaction,
31
(3–4), 295–325.
Drew, P., Walker, T., & Ogden, R. (2013). Self-repair
and action construction. In M. Hayashi, G. Raymond, & J. Sidnell (Eds.), Conversational
repair and human
understanding (pp. 71–94). Cambridge University Press.
Duncan, S. D. (2002). Gesture,
verb aspect, and the nature of iconic imagery in natural
discourse. Gesture,
2
(2), 183–206.
Ehmer, O., & Brône, G. (2021). Instructing
embodied knowledge: Multimodal approaches to interactive practices for knowledge
constitution. Linguistics
Vanguard, 7(s4).
Emerson, K., Williamson, V., & Wilkinson, R. (2017). Seeing
the music in their hands: How conductors’ depictions shape the
music. In E. Van Dyck (Ed.), ESCOM
2017 Proceedings. Presented at the 25th Anniversary Conference of the European Society for the Cognitive Sciences of Music
(ESCOM) (pp. 59–66). Ghent University.
Evans, B., & Lindwall, O. (2020). Show
Them or Involve Them? Two Organizations of Embodied Instruction. Research on Language and
Social
Interaction,
53
(2), 223–246.
Ford, C. E., & Fox, B. A. (2010). Multiple
practices for constructing laughables. In D. Barth-Weingarten, M. Selting, & E. Reber (Eds.), Prosody
in
Interaction (pp. 339–68). John Benjamins.
Fortescue, M. (1992). Aspect
and superaspect in Koyukon: An application of the Functional Grammar model to a polysynthetic
language. In Michael Fortescue, Peter Harder & Lars Kristoffersen (Eds.), Layered
Structure and Reference in a Functional
Perspective (pp. 99–141). John Benjamins.
Ford, C. E., Fox, B. A., & Thompson, S. A. (2002). Constituency
and the grammar of turn increments. In C. E. Ford, B. A. Fox, & S. A. Thompson (Eds.), The
Language of Turn and
Sequence (pp. 14–38). Oxford University Press.
Fox, B., Hayashi, M., & Jasperson, R. (1996). Resources
and Repair: A cross-linguistic study of syntax and repair. In E. Ochs, E. A. Schegloff, & S. A. Thompson (Eds.), Interaction
and
grammar (pp. 185–237). Cambridge University Press.
Fox, B. A., & Heinemann, T. (2015). The
alignment of manual and verbal displays in requests for the repair of an object. Research on
Language and Social
Interaction 48(3): 342–62.
Gardner, R. (2001). When
listeners talk: Response tokens and listener stance. John Benjamins.
Goodwin, C. (1979). The
Interactive Construction of a Sentence in Natural
Conversation. In G. Psathas (Ed.), Everyday
Language: Studies in
Ethnomethodology (pp. 97–121). Irvington Publishers.
Goodwin, C., Goodwin, M. H., & Olsher, D. (2002). Producing
Sense with Nonsense Syllables: Turn and Sequence in Conversations with a Man with Severe
Aphasia. In C. E. Ford, B. A. Fox, & S. A. Thompson (Eds.), The
Language of Turn and
Sequence (pp. 56–80). Oxford University Press.
Haakana, M. (2001). Laughter
as a patient’s resource: Dealing with delicate aspects of medical
interaction. Text,
21
(1), 187–219.
Hayashi, M. (2003). Language
and the body as resources for collaborative action: A study of word searches in Japanese
conversation. Research on Language and Social
Interaction,
36
(2), 109–141.
(2005). Referential
problems and turn construction: An exploration of an intersection between grammar and
interaction. Text,
25
(4), 437–488.
Heritage, J. (1984). A
change-of-state token and aspects of its sequential
placement. In J. M. Atkinson & John Heritage (Eds.), Structures
of Social
Action (pp. 299–345). Cambridge University Press.
(2011). Territories
of Knowledge, Territories of Experience: Empathic Moments in
Interaction. In T. Stivers, L. Mondada, & J. Steensig (Eds.), The
Morality of Knowledge in
Conversation (pp. 159–183). Cambridge University Press.
(2012). Epistemics
in action: Action formation and territories of knowledge. Research on Language and Social
Interaction,
45
(1), 1–29.
(2015).
Well-prefaced
turns in English conversation: A conversation analytic perspective. Journal of
Pragmatics,
88
1, 88–104.
Heritage, J., & Raymond, C. W. (2021). Preference
and Polarity: Epistemic Stance in Question Design. Research on Language and Social
Interaction,
54
(1), 39–59.
Hinton, L., Nichols, J. & Ohala, J. (1995). Introduction:
Sound-symbolic processes. In L. Hinton, J. Nichols & J. J. Ohala (Eds.), Sound
Symbolism (pp. 1–12). Cambridge University Press.
Hoey, E. (2014). Sighing
in interaction: Somatic, semiotic, and social. Research on Language and Social
Interaction,
47
(2), 175–200.
Hoey, E. M. (2020). Waiting
to Inhale: On Sniffing in Conversation. Research on Language and Social
Interaction,
53
(1), 118–139.
Hoey, E. M., & Raymond, C. W. (2022). Managing
conversation analysis data. In Andrea L. Berez-Kroeker, Brad McDonnell, Eve Koller, & Lauren B. Collister (Eds.), The
Open Handbook of Linguistic Data
Management (pp. 257–266). MIT Press. Online at:
Holt, E. (1996). Reporting
on talk: The use of direct reported speech in conversation. Research on Language and Social
Interaction,
29
(3), 219–245.
(2016). Laughter
at last: playfulness and laughter in interaction. Journal of
Pragmatics,
100
1, 89–102.
Jefferson, G. (1978). Sequential
aspects of storytelling in conversation. In Studies in the
organization of conversational
interaction (pp. 219–248). New York: Academic Press.
(1984a). On
the Organization of Laughter in Talk About Troubles. In J. M. Atkinson and J. Heritage (Eds.), Structures
of Social
Action (pp. 346–69). Cambridge University Press.
(1984b). Notes
on a systematic deployment of the acknowledgement tokens “Yeah” and “Mm Hm”. Papers in
Linguistics, 17(2), 197–216.
Jefferson, G., Sacks, H. & Schegloff, E. A. (1987). Notes
on Laughter in the Pursuit of Intimacy. In G. Button & John R. E. Lee (Eds.), Talk
and Social
Organisation (pp. 152–205). Multilingual Matters.
Keevallik, L. (2013). The
interdependence of bodily demonstrations and clausal syntax. Research on Language and Social
Interaction,
46
(1), 1–21.
(2018). What
does embodied interaction tell us about grammar? Research on Language and Social
Interaction,
51
1, 1–21.
(2020). Multimodal
noun phrases. In T. Ono & S. A. Thompson (Eds.), The
‘Noun Phrase’ across Languages: An Emergent Unit in
Interaction (pp. 154–177). John Benjamins.
(2021). Vocalizations
in dance classes teach body knowledge. Linguistics
Vanguard,
7
(s4), 20200098.
Keevallik, L. & Ogden, R. (2020). Sounds
on the Margins of Language at the Heart of Interaction. Research on Language and Social
Interaction,
53
(1):1–18.
Kendrick, K. H. (2015). The
intersection of turn-taking and repair: The timing of other-initiations of repair in
conversation. Frontiers in Psychology, 2501.
(2021). The
‘Other’ side of recruitment: methods of assistance in social interaction. Journal of
Pragmatics,
178
1, 68–82.
Kendrick, K. H., & Drew, P. (2016). Recruitment:
Offers, requests, and the organization of assistance in interaction. Research on Language and
Social
Interaction,
49
(1), 1–19.
Kendrick, K. H., & Holler, J. (2017). Gaze
Direction Signals Response Preference in Conversation. Research on Language and Social
Interaction,
50
(1), 12–32.
Lerner, G. (1996). On
the “semi-permeable” character of grammatical units in conversation: Conditional entry into the turn-space of another
speaker. In E. Ochs, E. A. Schegloff, & S. A. Thompson (Eds.), Interaction
and
Grammar (pp. 238–276). Cambridge University Press.
Lerner, G. H. (2013). On
the place of hesitating in delicate formulations: A turn-constructional infrastructure for collaborative
indiscretion. In M. Hayashi, G. Raymond, & J. Sidnell (Eds.), Conversational
Repair and Human
Understanding (pp. 95–134). Cambridge University Press.
Li, X. (2013). Language
and the body in the construction of units in Mandarin face-to-face
interaction. In Beatrice Szczepek Reed & Geoffrey Raymond (Eds.), Units
of talk–Units of
action (pp. 343–376). John Benjamins.
Li, C., & Thompson, S. A. (1981). Mandarin
Chinese: A Functional Reference Grammar. University of California Press.
Lindwall, O., & Ekström, A. (2012). Instruction-in-Interaction:
The Teaching and Learning of a Manual Skill. Human
Studies,
35
(1), 27–49.
Local, J., & Walker, G. (2012). How
phonetic features project more talk. Journal of the International Phonetic
Association,
42
(3), 255–280.
Löfgren, A., and Hofstetter, E. (2021). Introversive
semiosis in action: depictions in opera rehearsals. Social
Semiotics
33
(3), 601–620.
Majlesi, A. R., & Ekström, A. (2016). Baking
together — The coordination of actions in activities involving people with dementia. Journal of
Aging
Studies,
38
1, 37–46.
Manrique, E. (2016). Other-initiated
repair in Argentine Sign Language. Open
Linguistics,
2
(1), 1–34.
Marrese, O. H., C. W. Raymond, B. A. Fox, C. E. Ford, & M. Pielke. (2021). The
Grammar of Obviousness: Gesture in Argument Sequences. Frontiers in
Communication
6
1:663067.
McNeill, D. (2003). Aspects
of
aspect. Gesture,
3
(1), 1–17.
Mondada, L. (2006). Participants’
online analysis and multimodal practices: projecting the end of the turn and the closing of the
sequence. Discourse
Studies,
8
(1), 117–129.
(2012). Deixis:
an integrated interactional multimodal analysis. In Pia Bergmann, Jana Brenning, Martin Pfeiffer and Elisabeth Reber (Eds.), Prosody
and embodiment in interactional
grammar (pp. 173–206). De Gruyter.
(2015). Multimodal
completions. In A. Deppermann and S. Günthner (Eds.), Temporality
in
Interaction (pp. 267–307). John Benjamins.
(2019). Contemporary
issues in conversation analysis: Embodiment and materiality, multimodality and multisensoriality in social
interaction. Journal of
Pragmatics,
145
1, 47–62.
(2021). Sensing
in social interaction: The taste for cheese in gourmet shops. Cambridge University Press.
(2024a). Multimodal
transcription conventions. In J. D. Robinson, R. Clift, K. H. Kendrick, & C. W. Raymond (Eds.). The
Cambridge Handbook of Methods in Conversation
Analysis (pp. xx–xx). Cambridge University Press.
(2024b). Multimodality
in conversation analysis. In J. D. Robinson, R. Clift, K. H. Kendrick, & C. W. Raymond (Eds.). The
Cambridge Handbook of Methods in Conversation
Analysis (pp. xx–xx). Cambridge University Press.
Nevile, M., Haddington, P., Heinemann, T., & Rauniomaa, M. (Eds.). (2014). Interacting
with objects: Language, materiality, and social activity. John Benjamins.
Ogden, R. (2004). Non-modal
voice quality and turntaking in Finnish. In E. Couper-Kuhlen & C. A. Ford (Eds.), Sound
Patterns in Interaction: Cross-linguistic Studies from
Conversation (pp. 29–62). John Benjamins.
(2020). Audibly
not saying something with clicks. Research on Language and Social
Interaction
53
(1), 66–89.
(2021). Swallowing
in conversation. Frontiers in
Communication
6
1. [URL].
(2024). Listening
to talk-in-interaction: Ways of observing speech. In J. D. Robinson, R. Clift, K. H. Kendrick, & C. W. Raymond (Eds.). The
Cambridge Handbook of Methods in Conversation
Analysis (pp. xx–xx). Cambridge University Press.
Okada, M. (2018). Imperative
Actions in Boxing Sparring Sessions. Research on Language and Social
Interaction,
51
(1), 67–84.
(2023). Lexical
repetitions during time critical moments in boxing. Language &
Communication,
90
1, 95–113.
Olsher, D. (2004). Talk
and gesture: The embodies completion of sequential actions in spoken
interaction. In R. Gardner & J. Wagner (Eds.), Second
Language
Conversations (pp. 221–246).
Parrill, F. (2010). The
hands are part of the package: Gesture, common ground, and information
packaging. In Sally Rice and John Newman (eds.), Empirical
and experimental methods in cognitive/functional
research (pp. 285–302). CSLI Publications.
Parrill, F., Bergen, B. K., & Lichtenstein, P. V. (2013). Grammatical
aspect, gesture, and conceptualization: Using co-speech gesture to reveal event
representations. Cognitive
Linguistics,
24
(1), 135–158.
Pekarek Doehler, S. (2019). At
the Interface of Grammar and the Body: Chais pas (“dunno”) as a Resource for Dealing with Lack of Recipient
Response. Research on Language and Social
Interaction,
52
(4), 365–387.
Pekarek Doehler, S., Polak-Yitzhaki, H., Li, X., Stoenica, I. M., Havlík, M., & Keevallik, L. (2021). Multimodal
Assemblies for Prefacing a Dispreferred Response: A Cross-Linguistic Analysis. Frontiers in
Psychology,
12
1. [URL].
Pomerantz, A. (1980). Telling
my side: ‘Limited access’ as a fishing device. Sociological
Inquiry, 501 (3–4), 186–198.
Pomerantz, A. M. (1984). Pursuing
a Response. In J. M. Atkinson & John Heritage (Eds.), Structures
of Social
Action (pp. 152–164). Cambridge University Press.
Raymond, C. W., Robinson, J. D., Fox, B. A., Thompson, S. A., & Montiegl, K. (2021). Modulating
action through minimization: Syntax in the service of offering and requesting. Language in
Society,
50
1, 53–91.
Raymond, C. W., & Stivers, T. (2016). The
omnirelevance of accountability: Off-record account
solicitations. In J. D. Robinson (Ed.), Accountability
in Social
Interaction (pp. 321–353). Oxford University Press.
Sacks, H., E. A. Schegloff, & G. Jefferson. (1974). A
Simplest Systematics for the Organization of Turn-Taking for
Conversation. Language,
50
1, 696–735.
Schegloff, E. A. (1996). Turn
Organization: One Intersection of Grammar and Interaction. In Elinor Ochs, Emanuel A. Schegloff, & Sandra A. Thompson (Eds.), Interaction
and
Grammar (pp. 52–133). Cambridge University Press.
(1979). The
Relevance of Repair for Syntax-for-Conversation. In T. Givón (Ed.), Syntax
and Semantics 12: Discourse and
Syntax (pp. 261–288). Academic Press.
Schmidt, A., & Deppermann, A. (2023). Showing
and telling — How directors combine embodied demonstrations and verbal descriptions to instruct in theater
rehearsals. Frontiers in
Communication
7
1:955583.
Stevanovic, M. (2013). Constructing
a proposal as a thought: A way to manage problems in the initiation of joint decision-making in Finnish workplace
interaction. Pragmatics, 23(3), 519–544.
Stevanovic, M., & Peräkylä, A. (2012). Deontic
Authority in Interaction: The Right to Announce, Propose, and Decide. Research on Language and
Social
Interaction,
45
(3), 297–321.
Stukenbrock, A. (2014). Take
the words out of my mouth: Verbal instructions as embodied practices. Journal of
Pragmatics,
65
1, 80–102.
Skogmyr Marian, K. (2021). ‘Assessing
Without Words: Verbally Incomplete Utterances in Complaints’. Frontiers in
Psychology,
12
1.
Szczepek Reed, B. (2021). Singing
and the body: body-focused and concept-focused vocal instruction. Linguistics
Vanguard
7
1, 20200071.
Thompson, S. A., & Couper-Kuhlen, E. (2005). The
Clause as a Locus of Grammar and Interaction. Language and
Linguistics,
6
(4), 807–837.
Thompson, S. A., Fox, B. A., & Couper-Kuhlen, E. (2015). Grammar
in Everyday Talk: Building Responsive Actions. Cambridge University Press.
Thompson, S. A., Fox, B. A., & Raymond, C. W. (2021). The
Grammar of Proposals for Joint Activities. Interactional
Linguistics,
1
(1), 123–151.
Tolins, J. (2013). Assessment
and direction through nonlexical vocalizations in music instruction. Research on Language and
Social
Interaction,
46
(1), 47–64.
Vandelanotte, L. (2012). Quotative
go and be like: Grammar and
grammaticalization. In Barbara Dancygier & Eve Sweetser (Eds.), Quotatives:
Cross-linguistic and cross-disciplinary
perspectives (pp. 173–202). Cambridge University Press.
Velupillai, V. (2012). An
Introduction of Linguistic Typology. John Benjamins.
Walker, G. (2013). Phonetics
and Prosody in Conversation. In J. Sidnell & T. Stivers (Eds.), The
Handbook of Conversation
Analysis (pp. 455–474). Wiley-Blackwell.
Weeks, P. (1996). A
rehearsal of a Beethoven passage: An analysis of correction talk. Research on Language and
Social
Interaction,
29
(3), 247–290.
(2002). Performative
error-correction in music: A problem for ethnomethodological description. Human
Studies
25
(3), 359–385.