New Perspectives in Interactional Linguistic Research
e-Book – Open Access
ISBN 9789027246912
This collection of original papers illustrates recent trends and new perspectives for future research in Interactional Linguistics (IL). Since the research program was started around the turn of the century, it has prospered internationally. Recently, however, new developments have opened up new perspectives for interactional linguistic research.
IL continues to study the details of talk in social interaction, with a focus on linguistic resources and structures of verbal and vocal interaction in bodily-visible interactional settings. Increasingly, though, it embraces methods supported by new technology and broadens its data and research questions to applications in teaching, therapy, etc.
The volume comprises three parts with 14 contributions: (1) Studying linguistic resources in social interaction; (2) Studying linguistic resources in embodied social interaction; and (3) Studying social interaction in institutional contexts and involving speakers with specific proficiencies.
IL continues to study the details of talk in social interaction, with a focus on linguistic resources and structures of verbal and vocal interaction in bodily-visible interactional settings. Increasingly, though, it embraces methods supported by new technology and broadens its data and research questions to applications in teaching, therapy, etc.
The volume comprises three parts with 14 contributions: (1) Studying linguistic resources in social interaction; (2) Studying linguistic resources in embodied social interaction; and (3) Studying social interaction in institutional contexts and involving speakers with specific proficiencies.
[Studies in Language and Social Interaction, 36] 2024. vii, 428 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 13 August 2024
Published online on 13 August 2024
© John Benjamins
Available under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.
For any use beyond this license, please contact the publisher at [email protected].
Table of Contents
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Preface | pp. vii–viii
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Introducing new perspectives in interactional linguistic researchMargret Selting and Dagmar Barth-Weingarten | pp. 1–18
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Part I. Studying linguistic resources in social interaction
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What to do next: Should I and ((Do) you) want me to in joint activities in American EnglishAlexandra Gubina, Barbara A. Fox and Chase Wesley Raymond | pp. 20–48
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Ordering a series of turn-initial particles: An extreme case analysisHarrie Mazeland | pp. 49–72
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Turn continuation in yeah/no responding turns: Glottalization and vowel linking as contrastive sound patternsBeatrice Szczepek Reed and Marina Cantarutti | pp. 73–102
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What do you understand by X? Semantics in Interactional LinguisticsArnulf Deppermann | pp. 103–131
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Introducing the “Parallel European Corpus of Informal Interaction” (PECII): A novel resource for exploring cross-situational and cross-linguistic variability in social interactionUwe-A. Küttner, Laurenz Kornfeld, Christina Mack, Lorenza Mondada, Jowita Rogowska, Giovanni Rossi, Marja-Leena Sorjonen, Matylda Weidner and Jörg Zinken | pp. 132–160
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Part II. Studying linguistic resources in embodied social interaction
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E anche-prefaced other-expansions in multi-person interaction: On the interrelationship of syntax and mutual gazeVirginia Calabria and Elwys De Stefani | pp. 162–186
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Verbal and bodily practices for addressing trouble associated with embodied moves in game playAndrea Golato, Emma Betz, Carmen Taleghani-Nikazm and Veronika Drake | pp. 187–219
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Managing progressivity and solidarity with nage shenme ‘that what’ in Mandarin interactionXiaoting Li | pp. 220–244
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Noticing and assessing nature: A multimodal investigation of the format “perception imperative + exclamative” based on mobile eye-tracking dataPeter Auer, Barbara Laner, Martin Pfeiffer and Kerstin Botsch | pp. 245–275
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Part III. Studying social interaction in institutional contexts and involving speakers with specific proficiencies
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Requesting in shop encounters: Multimodal gestalts and their interactional and institutional accountabilityLorenza Mondada | pp. 278–309
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Calibrating sensitive actions in palliative care consultations: Physicians’ use of routinized wenn ich ehrlich bin/wenn man ehrlich ist-constructionsSusanne Günthner | pp. 310–333
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How grammar-for-interaction emerges over time: Evidence from second language talkSimona Pekarek Doehler | pp. 334–359
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Treating an error in another’s talk as laughable: Evidence from conversations involving second language speakers and speakers with aphasiaJohannes Wagner and Ray Wilkinson | pp. 360–383
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Language alternation in the multilingual classroom: Communicative functions and multimodal gestaltsMaxi Kupetz and Elena Becker | pp. 384–415
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Appendix. Transcription conventions | pp. 417–424
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Subject index | pp. 425–428
Subjects
Main BIC Subject
CFG: Semantics, Pragmatics, Discourse Analysis
Main BISAC Subject
LAN009030: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / Pragmatics