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Speakers’ dialogical orientation to the particular others they talk to is implemented by practices of recipient-design. One such practice is the use of negation as a means to constrain interpretations of speaker’s actions by the partner. The paper situates this use of negation within the larger context of other recipient-designed uses of negation which negate assumptions the speaker makes about what the addressee holds to be true (second-order assumptions) or what the addressee assumes the speaker holds to be true (third- order assumptions). The focus of the study is on the ways in which speakers use negation to disclaim interpretations of their turns which partners have displayed or may possibly arrive at. Special emphasis is given to the positionally sensitive uses of negation, which may occur before, after or inserted between the nucleus actions whose interpretation is constrained by the negation. Interactional motivations and rhetorical potentials of the practice are pointed out, partly depending on the position of the negation vis-à-vis the nucleus action. The analysis shows that the concept of ‘recipient design’ is in need of distinctions which have not been in focus in prior research.
"Kaum [...] da, wird' ich gedisst!" Funktionale Aspekte des Banter-Prinzips auf dem Online-Prüfstand
(2016)
The article is to be considered as an attempt to enrich the theoretical approach of the Banter-Principle (Leech 1983) with an online point of view. Examples from Teamspeak- conversations and comments on the social network site Facebook reveal different user practices regarding the identifiability of the Banter-Principle: Nonverbal elements or emoticons in order to make sure that Banter is understood correctly in written language on the one hand; coping with assigned roles depending on dynamic group internal hierarchies in oral communication on the other hand. Nevertheless one question remains. Why should one disguise a cordial message rudely? My analysis shows two functions of Online Banter. Firstly, maximize the entertainment value of a conversation and secondly, establish an accepted online-identity.
Acht authentische Arbeitsbesprechungen aus Unternehmen bilden die Basis für eine detaillierte linguistische Analyse. Von Mikrosignalen bis hin zu rhetorischen Verfahren werden sprachliche Mittel im Hinblick auf steuernde und manipulative Funktionen beschrieben. Aus dem Gesprächsverhalten der Teilnehmer entfaltet sich in actu ein Spektrum sozialer Strukturen in unternehmerischen Organisationen.
Am Beispiel von Situationseröffnungen eines Mitglieds einer Gruppe regelmäßiger Kioskbesucher
läßt sich zweierlei zeigen: Zum einen, daß sich ein Großteil des kommunikativen Repertoires, das
der Kioskgast während seines Schauplatzaufenthalts realisiert, bereits in den Situationseröffnungen
finden läßt. Dies gibt Anlaß zur Annahme, daß die Schauplatzeintritte - aus strukturanalytischer
Perspektive - ‘mikrostrukturelle Verdichtungen’ des Gesamtverhaltens darstellen. Zweitens zeigt die
Analyse dieser kommunikativen Formen, welche Bedeutung der Aufenthalt im Kiosk für diesen Gast
besitzt. Die Rekonstruktion des kommunikativen Verhaltens des Gastes und die darin zum Ausdruck
kommende Bedeutung werden in dem Konzept der ‘Präsenzfigur’ zusammengefaßt.
Anhand einer konversationsanalytischen Untersuchung wird eine unter männlichen Jugendlichen weit verbreitete Praktik aggressiven Sprechens, das sog. gissen“, dargestellt. Die Untersuchung der sequenziellen Organisation, der Teilnehmerkonstellation und der spezifischen semantischen und gestalterischen Eigenschaften von ,Diss-Scquenzen‘ zeigt, dass,Dissen1 zur spielerischen Herabsetzung des Opponenten vor einem w-groi/p-Publikum abzielt. Dabei zeigt sich eine charakteristische Doppelstruktur von Spaß und Ernst: Entgegen der offiziellen Modali- sierung der Aktivität als unernst, stellt ,Dissen* ein prominentes Verfahren zur Verhandlung von Charakter, Status und moralischen Ansprüchen in jugendlichen peer-groups dar.
This study explores how ‘gatherings’ turn into ‘encounters’ in a virtual world (VW) context. Most communication technologies enable only focused encounters between distributed participants, but in VWs both gatherings and encounters can occur. We present close sequential analysis of moments when after a silent gathering, interaction among participants in a VW is gradually resumed, and also investigate the social actions in the verbal (re-)opening turns. Our findings show that like in face-to-face situations, also in VWs participants often use different types of embodied resources to achieve the transition, rather than rely on verbal means only. However, the transition process in VWs has distinctive characteristics compared to the one in face-to-face situations. We discuss how participants in a VW use virtually embodied pre-beginnings to display what we call encounter-readiness, instead of displaying lack of presence by avatar stillness. The data comprise 40 episodes of video-recorded team interactions in a VW.
Feedback utterances are among the most frequent in dialogue. Feedback is also a crucial aspect of linguistic theories that take social interaction, involving language, into account. This paper introduces the corpora and datasets of a project scrutinizing this kind of feedback utterances in French. We present the genesis of the corpora (for a total of about 16 hours of transcribed and phone force-aligned speech) involved in the project. We introduce the resulting datasets and discuss how they are being used in on-going work with focus on the form-function relationship of conversational feedback. All the corpora created and the datasets produced in the framework of this project will be made available for research purposes.
This article presents a revised version of GAT, a transcription system first devel-oped by a group of German conversation analysts and interactional linguists in 1998. GAT tries to follow as many principles and conventions as possible of the Jefferson-style transcription used in Conversation Analysis, yet proposes some conventions which are more compatible with linguistic and phonetic analyses of spoken language, especially for the representation of prosody in talk-in-interaction. After ten years of use by researchers in conversation and discourse analysis, the original GAT has been revised, against the background of past experience and in light of new necessities for the transcription of corpora arising from technologi-cal advances and methodological developments over recent years. The present text makes GAT accessible for the English-speaking community. It presents the GAT 2 transcription system with all its conventions and gives detailed instructions on how to transcribe spoken interaction at three levels of delicacy: minimal, basic and fine. In addition, it briefly introduces some tools that may be helpful for the user: the German online tutorial GAT-TO and the transcription editing software FOLKER.
The transition between phases of activities is a practical problem which participants in an interaction have to deal with routinely. In meetings, the sequence of phases of activity is often outlined by a written agenda. However, transitions still have to be accomplished by local interactional work of the participants. In a detailed conversation analytic case study based on video-data, it is shown how participants collaboratively accomplish an emergent interactional state of affairs (a break-like activity) which differs widely from the state of affairs which was projected by awritten agenda (the next presentation), although in doing so, the participants still show their continuous orientation to the agenda. The paper argues that the reconstruction of emergent developments in interaction calls for a multimodal analysis of interaction, because the fine-grained multimodal co-ordination of bodily and verbal resources provides for opportunities of sequentially motivated, relevant next actions. These, however, can amount to emergent activity sequences, which may be at odds with the activity types which are projected by an interactional agenda or expected on behalf of some institutional routine.
Alltagsgespräche
(2001)