Toshiaki Furukawa
List of John Benjamins publications for which Toshiaki Furukawa plays a role.
Articles
Place and membership categorization in a Hawaiian language radio show Categorization in multilingual storytelling, Prior, Matthew T. and Steven Talmy (eds.), pp. 375–398 | Article
2019 Recent articles by prominent scholars of discourse and interaction have renewed the debate over the relationship between membership categorization analysis (MCA) and conversation analysis (CA). Many consider CA and MCA as mutually informing, and that is the position I take in this paper. MCA has… read more
Humor, laughter, and affect in multilingual comedy performances in Hawai‘i Emotion in Multilingual Interaction, Prior, Matthew T. and Gabriele Kasper (eds.), pp. 267–287 | Article
2016 Informed by interaction-based work on affect and identity in conversation analysis, discursive psychology, membership categorization analysis, and stylization studies, this chapter contributes to contemporary humor research by investigating discursive practices in comedy performances in Hawai‘i.… read more
Intertextuality, mediation, and members’ categories in focus groups on humor Media Intertextualities, Hiramoto, Mie (ed.), pp. 81–106 | Article
2012 This paper extends studies on intertextuality into a more explicitly interactional context. I examine the actual process of intertextuality where comedy audiences construct recombinant selves through making sense of various membership categories as well as through making sense of a certain kind of… read more
Intertextuality, mediation, and members’ categories in focus groups on humor Media Intertextualities: Semiotic mediation across time and space, Hiramoto, Mie (ed.), pp. 257–283 | Article
2010 This paper extends studies on intertextuality into a more explicitly interactional context. I examine the actual process of intertextuality where comedy audiences construct recombinant selves through making sense of various membership categories as well as through making sense of a certain kind of… read more
“No flips in the pool”: Discursive practice in Hawai‘i Creole Pragmatics 17:3, pp. 371–385 | Article
2007 Linguistic hybridity is the process of the authorial unmasking of another’s speech, through a language that is double-accented and double-styled. The present study investigates how linguistic resources, especially code-switching is used for meaning making in local comedy shows in Hawai‘i. Local… read more