Article published In:
Pragmatics
Vol. 11:3 (2001) ► pp.223262
References
Barnlund, Dean
(1989) Communicative styles of Japanese and Americans. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Boden, Deirdre
(1994) The Business of talk: Organizations in action. Cambridge: Polity Press.  BoPGoogle Scholar
Boden, Deirdre, & Don H. Zimmerman
(eds.) (1991) Talk & social structure: Studies in ethnomethodology and conversation analysis. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Drew, Paul, & John Heritage
(eds.) (1992) Talk at work: Interaction in institutional settings. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.  BoPGoogle Scholar
Fox, Barbara, Makoto Hayashi, & Robert Jasperson
(1996) Resources and repair: A cross-linguistic study of syntax and repair. In E. Ochs, E. Schegloff, and S. Thompson (eds.), Interaction and grammar.Cambridge University Press, pp. 185-237. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Goffman, Erving
(1981) Forms of talk. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.  BoPGoogle Scholar
Goodwin, Charles
(1981) Conversational organization: Interaction between speakers and hearers. New York: Academic Press.  BoPGoogle Scholar
Hayashi, Makoto
(1994) A comparative study of self-repair in English and Japanese conversation. In N. Akatsuka (ed.), Japanese/Korean linguistics 4. Stanford: CSLI Publications, pp. 77-94.Google Scholar
(1999) Where grammar and interaction meet: A study of co-participant completion in Japanese conversation. Human Studies 22.(2-4): 475-499. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Hayashi, Makoto, & Junko Mori
(1998) Co-construction in Japanese revisited: We do "finish each others sentences". In N. Akatsuka, H. Hoji, S. Iwasaki, S. Sohn, and S. Strauss (eds.), Japanese/Korean linguistics 7. Stanford: CSLI Publications, pp. 77-93.Google Scholar
Heath, Christian
(1984) Talk and recipiency: Sequential organization in speech and body movement. In J.M. Atkinson and J. Heritage (eds.), Structures of social action: Studies in conversation analysis . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 247-265.Google Scholar
Heritage, John
(1984) A change-of-state token and aspects of its sequential placement. In J. M. Atkinson J. Heritageand (eds.), Structures of social action: Studies in conversation analysis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 299-345.Google Scholar
(1998) Oh-prefaced responses to inquiry. Language in Society 271: 291-334. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Hester, Stephen, & Peter Eglin
(eds.) (1997) Culture in action: Studies in membership category analysis. Washington D.C.: University Press of America.  BoPGoogle Scholar
Hutchby, Ian
(1996) Confrontation talk: Arguments, asymmetries, and power on talk radio. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.Google Scholar
Iwasaki, Shoichi
(1997) The Northridge earthquake conversations: The floor structure and the ‘loop’ sequence in Japanese conversation. Journal of Pragmatics 281: 661-693. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Kendon, Adam
(1982) The organization of behavior in face-to-face interaction: Observations on the development of a methodology. In K. Scherer P. Ekmanand (eds.), Handbook of methods in nonverbal behavior research. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 440-505.Google Scholar
Lebra, Takie
(1976) Japanese patterns of behavior. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.Google Scholar
Lerner, Gene, & Tomoyo Takagi
(1999) On the place of linguistic resources in the organization of talk-in-interaction: A co-investigation of English and Japanese practices. Journal of Pragmatics 311: 49-75. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Locastro, Virginia
(1987) Aizuchi: A Japanese conversational routine. In L. Smith (ed.), Discourse across cultures. New York: Prentice Hall, pp. 101-113.Google Scholar
Lynch, Michael
(2000) The ethnomethodological foundations of conversation analysis. Text 20.41: 517-532.  BoPGoogle Scholar
Maynard, Senko
(1986) On back-channel behavior in Japanese and English casual conversation. Linguistics 241: 1079-1108. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
(1989) Japanese conversation: Self-contextualization, structure, and interactional management. Norwood, NJ: Ablex.Google Scholar
Mizutani, Osamu, & Nobuko Mizutani
(1987) How to be polite in Japanese. Tokyo: The Japan Times.Google Scholar
Mori, Junko
Nakane, Chie
(1970) Japanese society. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Pomerantz, Anita
(1984) Agreeing and disagreeing with assessments: Some features of preferred/dispreferred turn shapes. In J.M. Atkinson and J. Heritage (eds.), Structures of Social Action: Studies in Conversation Analysis.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 57-101.Google Scholar
Sacks, Harvey
(1992) Lectures on conversation. Edited by G. Jefferson. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar
Sacks, Harvey, Emanuel Schegloff, and Gail Jefferson
(1974) A simplest systematics for the organization of turn taking in conversation. Language 501: 697-735. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Saft, Scott
(1998) Some uses and meanings of utterance initial iya in Japanese Discourse. In N. Akatsuka, H. Hoji, S. Iwasaki, S.O. Sohn, and S. Strauss (eds.), Japanese/Korean linguistics Vol. 71. Stanford: CSLI Publications, pp. 121-137.Google Scholar
(2000) Arguing in the institution: Context, culture, and conversation analysis in a set of Japanese university faculty meetings. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Hawai’i at Manoa.
(2001a) Concession displays in arguments and disagreements that occur in Japanese discourse: Unique cultural style or situated interactional achievement. In E. Németh (ed.), Pragmatics in 2000: Selected papers from the 7th International Pragmatics Conference. Antwerp: IPrA, pp. 496-507.Google Scholar
(2001b) Acknowledgement tokens and arguments in Japanese university faculty meetings. Paperpresented at the IIEMCA conference on ‘Orders of Ordinary Action’. July 9-11, Manchester, UK.
Schegloff, Emanuel
(1992) Introduction in Harvey Sacks’ Lectures on conversation. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. IX-LXII.Google Scholar
Smith, Robert J
(1983) Japanese society: Tradition, self, and the social order. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Takagi, Tomoyo
(1999) "Questions" in argument sequences in Japanese. Human Studies 221: 397-423. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Tanaka, Hiroko
(2000) Turn projection in Japanese talk-in-interaction. Research on Language and Social Interaction 33.11: 1-38. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Watanabe, Suwako
(1993) Cultural differences in framing: American and Japanese group discussions. In D. Tannen (ed.), Framing in discourse. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 176-209.Google Scholar
White, Sheida
(1989) Back-channels across cultures: A study of Americans and Japanese. Language in Society 181: 59-77. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Wierzbicka, Anna
(1991) Japanese key words and core cultural values. Language in Society 201: 333-385. DOI logo  BoPGoogle Scholar
Yamada, Haru
(1992) American and Japanese business discourse: A comparison of interactional styles. Norwood, NJ: Ablex.Google Scholar
(1997) Different games/Different rules: Why Americans and Japanese misunderstand each other. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Cited by

Cited by 11 other publications

Cook, Haruko Minegishi
2011. Are honorifics polite? Uses of referent honorifics in a Japanese committee meeting. Journal of Pragmatics 43:15  pp. 3655 ff. DOI logo
Deppermann, Arnulf, Reinhold Schmitt & Lorenza Mondada
2010. Agenda and emergence: Contingent and planned activities in a meeting. Journal of Pragmatics 42:6  pp. 1700 ff. DOI logo
Ebsworth, Miriam Eisenstein & Nobuko Kodama
2011. The pragmatics of refusals in English and Japanese: alternative approaches to negotiation. International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2011:208 DOI logo
Mori, Junko
2004. Negotiating Sequential Boundaries and Learning Opportunities: A Case from a Japanese Language Classroom. The Modern Language Journal 88:4  pp. 536 ff. DOI logo
Nanbu, Zachary
2020. “Do you know banana boat?”: Occasioning overt knowledge negotiations in Japanese EFL conversation. Journal of Pragmatics 169  pp. 30 ff. DOI logo
Raclaw, Joshua & Cecilia E. Ford
2015. Meetings as Interactional Achievements. In The Cambridge Handbook of Meeting Science,  pp. 247 ff. DOI logo
Saito, Junko
2011. Managing confrontational situations: Japanese male superiors’ interactional styles in directive discourse in the workplace. Journal of Pragmatics 43:6  pp. 1689 ff. DOI logo
Schmitt, Reinhold
2006. Interaction in work meetings. Revue française de linguistique appliquée Vol. XI:2  pp. 69 ff. DOI logo
Tanaka, Hiroko
2013. The Japanese response token Hee for registering the achievement of epistemic coherence. Journal of Pragmatics 55  pp. 51 ff. DOI logo
Yokomori, Daisuke, Eiko Yasui & Are Hajikano
2018. Registering the receipt of information with a modulated stance: A study of ne-marked other-repetitions in Japanese talk-in-interaction. Journal of Pragmatics 123  pp. 167 ff. DOI logo
Zimmerman, Erica
2020. Code‐switching in conversation‐for‐learning: Creating opportunities for learning while on study abroad. Foreign Language Annals 53:1  pp. 149 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 12 march 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.