Article In: Pragmatics and Society: Online-First Articles
Membership categorization in children’s pretend play
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Abstract
Drawing on data from 24 hours of video-recorded interaction of two bilingual (Korean, English) children aged
between three and five, we use multimodal conversation analysis and membership categorization analysis to show how pretend
membership categories are invoked and mapped onto the children during social pretend play. In the examined data, the membership
categories (person typifications) are organized into standardized relational pairs, such as “host” and “guest,”
for which the existence of an incumbent of one category makes the existence of an incumbent of the other category programmatically
relevant. The analysis shows some of the resources, which include place names and language alternation, through which the mapping
of categories is contextualized, made relevant, and attempted or accomplished. The analysis also shows how mapping can be
unproblematic and fleeting and how attempted mapping can be ignored, which highlights the necessity of collaboration for social
pretend play. Data are in English and Korean.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Social pretend play
- 3.Standardized relational pairs and mapping
- 4.Language alternation in children’s peer group interaction
- 5.Data, participants, and methodology
- 6.Analysis
- 6.1Language Alternation and Place Names as Resources for Mapping
- 6.2Linguistic and material resources for (attempted) mapping
- 7.Concluding discussion
- Acknowledgment
- Notes
References
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