Refine
Document Type
- Article (8)
- Part of a Book (3)
Has Fulltext
- yes (11)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (11) (remove)
Keywords
- multimodality (11) (remove)
Publicationstate
- Veröffentlichungsversion (9)
- Zweitveröffentlichung (2)
- Postprint (1)
Reviewstate
- Peer-Review (10)
- (Verlags-)Lektorat (1)
Publisher
- Volgogradskij gosudarstvennyj universitet (2)
- Benjamins (1)
- De Gruyter Mouton (1)
- Elsevier (1)
- IDS-Verlag (1)
- Ministry of science and higher education of Russian Federation; Tomsk State Pedagogical University (1)
- Royal Danish Library (1)
- Springer Nature (1)
- Verlag für Gesprächsforschung (1)
- de Gruyter (1)
Our everyday lives in any social community are shaped by rules (e.g., Roughley 2019; Schmidt/Rakoczy 2019). Rules (in a broad sense) are interactionally negotiated, monitored, enforced, and serve as an ‘orientation value‘ in social life. If someone‘s behavior is treated as norm-violating or problematic in certain way, it may be therefore confronted. Confronting interlocutors can immediately stop, modify, or retrospectively reprimand the misconduct of others in a moralizing manner. Such confrontations of a problem behavior occur commonly in informal interactions. On the basis of our corpus, specifically in informal interactions at the table, I observed that, for example, in Polish, German and British English, direct confrontations occur on average at least once every three minutes. Participants design these actions in a variety of ways, but like everything in interaction, the design is not arbitrary (Sacks 1984; Enfield/Sidnell 2019). A recurrent feature of such turns is connecting misconduct to some more general concepts. It is evident from the data that e.g. speakers of German and Polish use ‘generally valid statements’ in problematic moments (cf. Küttner/Vatanen/Zinken 2022) to reach the closure of the problem sequence, also specifically dealing there with distribution of deontic and epistemic rights (Rogowska in prep.). I ask, when and for what purpose generality, that is, abstracting from a concrete behaviour, is used as a tool while confronting others. The focus is on sequential and linguistic features of abstracting in confronting moments in language comparison. What are the methods to achieve abstraction: i) defocusing the confronted, specific agent (cf. Zinken et al. 2021; Siewierska 2008), e.g. nur derjenige der dran ist der darf die bedingungen für den handel stellen (only the one whose turn it is may set the conditions for the trade); using ii) extreme case formulations (Pomerantz 1986), e.g. na siostrę zawsze można liczyć (you can always count on a sister); iii) referring to stable character traits, e.g. Matylda bardzo chetne by podala. (.) Ona jest taka skora do pomocy (Matylda would be very happy to pass (it to you). (.) She is so eager to help); or iv) broader categorizing of the given referent, e.g. do not build (.) do do not build do not build swastikas (when a) German guy is filming us? Sometimes, even several locus of abstraction are combined in the same turn. Can we identify language-specific and cross-linguistic patterns? What are the interactional consequences: enforcing a compliant behavior in the future, eliciting an apology or cognitively simplifying complex problems? From a comparative perspective, I ask whether going beyond the here-and-now while confronting others is a practice that unites speakers across languages and is thus a human cognitive strategy to display normativity. This ongoing study is based on new comparable data from four European languages from informal interaction during activities around the table (Kornfeld/Küttner/Zinken 2023; Küttner et al. in prep.). The phenomenon was coded systematically in each of the four languages as part of a larger, quantitatively oriented study with different questions (Küttner et al. submitted). In the talk, I will show exemplarily Polish and German evidence. I use the methods of Conversation Analysis (Sidnell/Stivers (eds.) 2012) and Interactional Linguistics (Imo/Lanwer 2019).
This article investigates mundane photo taking practices with personal mobile devices in the co-presence of others, as well as “divergent” self-initiated smartphone use, thereby exploring the impact of everyday technologies on social interaction. Utilizing multimodal conversation analysis, we examined sequences in which young adults take pictures of food and drinks in restaurants and cafés. Although everyday interactions are abundant in opportunities for accomplishing food photography as a side activity, our data show that taking pictures is also often prioritized over other activities. Through a detailed sequential analysis of video recordings and dynamic screen captures of mobile devices, we illustrate how photographers orient to the momentary opportunities for and relevance of photo taking, that is, how they systematically organize their photographing with respect to the ongoing social encounter and the (projected) changes in the material environment. We investigate how the participants multimodally negotiate the “mainness” and “sideness” (Mondada, 2014) of situated food photography and describe some particular features of participants’ conduct in moments of mundane multiactivity.
Using multimodal conversation analysis, we investigate how novices learning the “inner body” acting technique in the context of a community theater project share their experiences of the bodily exercises through verbal and embodied conduct. We focus on how verbal description and bodily enactment of the experience mutually elaborate each other, and how the experienced sensorimotor and affective qualities are made to be witnessed and recognized by the others. Participants describe their experiences without naming qualities. Instead, a display of the experienced qualities is made accessible to others through coordinating the unfolding talk and bodily conduct. In particular, we show how grammatical and action projection is fulfilled by interconnected verbal and embodied conduct, with body movement and posture giving off ineffable experiential qualities. The moving body appears both as a source of the experience and as a resource for depicting perceived qualities to others; additional resources (non-specific person reference and gaze aversion) contribute to organizing the subjective and intersubjective layers of the reflection of the experiences. The study contributes to and extends recent research on sensoriality in interaction by focusing on phenomena of proprioception and interoception. The data are two cases drawn from 60 h of video-recordings made in the context of a devised community theater project. The data are in Finnish with English translations.
In this chapter, we overview the specificity of comparisons made within the perspective of Conversation Analysis (CA), and we position them in relation to other fields. We introduce the analytical mentality, methodology, and procedures of CA, and we show how we used it for the analysis of OKAY in this volume.
Using video-recordings from one day of a theater project for young adults, this paper investigates how the meaning of novel verbal expressions is interactionally constituted and elaborated over the interactional history of a series of activities. We examine how the theater director introduces and instructs the group in the Chekhovian technique of acting, which is based on “imagining with the body,” and how the imaginary elements of the technique are “brought into existence” in the language of the instructions. By tracking shifts in the instructor’s use of the key expressions invisible/imaginary/inner body or movement through a series of exercises, we demonstrate how they are increasingly treated as real and perceivable bodily conduct. The analyses focus on the instructor’s attribution of factual and agentive properties to these expressions, and the changes that these properties undergo over the series of instructions. This case demonstrates the significance of longitudinal processes for the establishment of shared meaning in social interaction. The study thereby contributes to the field of interactional semantics and to longitudinal studies of social interaction.
A large database is a desirable basis for multimodal analysis. The development of more elaborate methods, data banks, and tools for a stronger empirical grounding of multimodal analysis is a prevailing topic within multimodality. Prereq- uisite for this are corpora for multimodal data. Our contribution aims at developing a proposal for gathering and building multimodal corpora of audio-visual social media data, predominantly YouTube data.Our contribution has two parts: First we outline a participation framework which is able to represent the complexity of YouTube communication. To this end we ‘dissect’ the different communicative and multimodal layers YouTube consists of. Besides the Video performance YouTube also integrates comments, social media operators, commercials, and announcements for further YouTube Videos. The data consists of various media and modes and is interactively engaged in various discourses. Hence, it is rather difficult to decide what can be considered as a basic communicative unit (or a ‘turn’) and how it can be mapped. Another decision to be made is which elements are of higher priority than others, thus have to be integrated in an adequate transcription format. We illustrate our conceptual considerations on the example of so-called L e t’s Plays, which are supposed to present and comment Computer gaming processes.The second part is devoted to corpus building. Most previous studies either worked with ad hoc data samples or outlined data mining and data sampling strategies. Our main aim is to delineate in a systematic way and based on the conceptual outline in the first part necessary elements which should be part of a YouTube corpus. To this end we describe in a first Step which components (e.g., the Video itself, the comments, the metadata, etc.) should be captured. ln a second Step we outline why and which relations (e.g., screen appearances, hypertextual struc- tures, etc.) are worth to get part of the corpus. In sum, our contribution aims at outlining a proposal for gathering and systematizing multimodal data, specifically audio-visual social media data, in a corpus derived from a conceptual modeling of important communicative processes of the research object itself.
The article starts by outlining the theoretical and conceptual foundations in the field of multimodal interaction analysis, which, based on its spatiallinguistic orientation, deals with the meaning of space for the constitution of social meaning. Conceptually, we refer to the ideas of architecture-forinteraction and social topography. Empirically, we look towards the entire range of visually perceptible physical expressions of the Communion participants. We also focus on the spatial prerequisites and the space-related knowledge of the visitors, which becomes evident in their situational behaviour. From our point of view, Communion is not only a ritual in worship but also a task of coordination and positioning. We analyse video excerpts of two Communions in Lutheran-Protestant worship. The central question is: How do the people who hand out the sacrament to the participants take part in the procedure themselves (self-supply)? The video excerpts are from Germany(Rimbach and Zotzenbach, South Hesse). We see self-supply as a situational reproduction of institutional structures and relevancies. Methodologically, we first analyse an example in detail, in which we elaborate constitutive aspects of self-supply and the associated implications in the sense of an arising communitisation of the faithful. The subsequent analysis is carried out from a comparative perspective with reference to the results already obtained. The analyses lead to two basic models. Firstly, we identified a two-phase model in which first the churchgoers and then separately the institution’s representatives celebrate Communion. Structurally linked to this model is the is the diverging presence of those who have already completed the ritual, divergence resulting in two ensembles with their respective interaction space. The churchgoers watch the pastor and his assistants perform the ritual themselves. Secondly, we were able to formulate an integrative model in which the pastor celebrates Communion as one of the community. This preserves cohesion among all churchgoers and there is no ritual display of the institution’s representatives as in the two-phase model. As for model-shaping factors, two aspects become particularly clear: The first are the opportunities which the architecture-forinteraction, i.e. the concrete space for the Communion, provides. The second is the number of participants who perform the ceremony under these spatial conditions. Both aspects have a direct impact on the organisation of Communion, the movement within the church space and, indirectly, on the structure and implications of self-supply.
Der Beitrag untersucht auf der Grundlage der multimodal-raumanalytischen Interaktionsanalyse die Abendmahlfeier in drei lutherisch-protestantischen Gottesdiensten. Die Videoaufnahmen hierzu stammen aus Sarepta (Russland) und Rimbach und Zotzenbach (Deutschland). Nach einer kurzen Einordnung des Beitrags in den relevanten Forschungszusammenhang wird das spezifische raumanalytische Erkenntnisinteresse am Abendmahl als kollektive Positionierungsanforderung erläutert. Drei Fallanalysen rekonstruieren zunächst die interaktionsarchitektonischen Voraussetzungen für die kollektive Bewegung der Gemeinde ins kirchenräumliche Vorne. Diese Bewegung, die Positionierung der Gemeinde zur Einnahme des Abendmahls (der Konsum von Wein und Brot) und der Rückweg zu den Kirchenbänken sind raumbezogene Teilaufgaben, die in der konkreten Situation bearbeitet werden müssen. Die Bewegung der Gemeinde wird in den drei analysierten Gottesdiensten auf sehr unterschiedliche Weise organisiert. Die Rekonstruktion dieser Unterschiede ermöglicht die Formulierung von drei unterschiedlichen Vollzugsmodellen primär auf der Basis der zwei folgenden Aspekte: Relevant ist zum einen das Ausmaß und die Form der Vergemeinschaftung
(als symbolischer Nachvollzugs des überlieferten Abendmahls von Jesus Christus mit seinen Jüngern am Gründonnerstag) und zum anderen die Spezifik, in der die Teilnehmer konkret den Wein und das Brot konsumieren. Auf diesem Wege konnten ein Modell der Vergemeinschaftung mit Kollektivversorgung (Sarepta), ein Modell der Teil-Vergemeinschaftung mit Teil-Gruppenversorgung (Zotzenbach) sowie ein Individualisierungsmodell mit Einzelversorgung (Rimbach) identifiziert werden. Als strukturprägende Einflussgrößen werden einerseits die Möglichkeiten, die die Architektur für den Vollzug des Abendmahls zur Verfügung stellt, und andererseits die Anzahl der Teilnehmer deutlich. Ab einer gewissen Anzahl entsteht eine Art Ökonomisierungszwang, der sich negativ auf die Qualität der Vergemeinschaftung auswirkt. Von Reinhold Schmitt stammt die Idee, das Abendmahl als Koordinations- und Positionierungsaufgabe zu konzeptualisieren. Er hat auch die multimodal-interaktionsanalytische Methodologie entwickelt, die dem Beitrag zugrunde liegt. Darüber hinaus hat er die Videoaufnahmen in Rimbach und Zotzenbach erstellt und transkribiert. Anna Petrova hat die Gottesdienste in Sarepta dokumentiert und transkribiert. Die methodische und theoretische Konzeption des Beitrags stammt von beiden Autoren. Auch die Analysen der ausgewählten Fälle haben sie gemeinsam durchgeführt.
Overtaking as an interactional achievement : video analyses of participants' practices in traffic
(2018)
In this article we pursue a systematic and extensive study of overtaking in traffic as an interactional event. Our focus is on the accountable organisation and accomplishment of overtaking by road users in real-world traffic situations. Data and analysis are drawn from multiple research groups studying driving from an ethnomethodological and conversation analytic perspective. Building on multimodal and sequential analyses of video recordings of overtaking events, the article describes the shared practices which overtakers and overtaken parties use in displaying, recognizing and coordinating their manoeuvres. It examines the three sequential phases of an overtaking event: preparation and projection; the overtaking proper; the re-alignment post-phase including retrospective accounts and assessments. We identify how during each of these phases drivers and passengers organize intra-vehicle and inter-vehicle practices: driving and non-driving related talk between vehicle- occupants, the emerging spatiotemporal ecology of the road, and the driving actions of other road users. The data is derived from a two camera set-up recording the road ahead and car interior. The recordings are from three settings: daily commuting, driving lessons, race-car coaching. The events occur on a variety of road types (motorways, country roads, city streets, a race track, etc.), in six languages (English, Finnish, French, German, Italian, and Swedish) and in seven countries (Australia, Finland, France, Germany, Sweden, Switzerland, and the UK). From an exceptionally diverse collection of video data, the study of which is made possible thanks to the innovative collaboration of multiple researchers, the article exhibits the range of practical challenges and communicative skills involved in overtaking.
Auf der Grundlage videodokumentierter Kirchenbesichtigungen, bei denen exothetisches Sprechen als Erhebungsmethode eingesetzt wurde, analysiert der Aufsatz Gemeinsamkeiten und Unterschiede in den Kirchenbesichtigungen von Aurelia, Saskia und Anton. Alle haben dieselbe Kirche besichtigt und ihre visuelle Wahrnehmung des Kirchenraums – das war die explizit formulierte Aufgabe – durch verbale Kommentare und Beschreibungen begleitet. Übergeordnetes Ziel der Analyse des exothetischen Sprechens war die Rekonstruktion der den Besichtigungen zugrundeliegenden Konzepte, die zum Großteil in mitgebrachten Relevanzen begründet sind. Nach der Skizzierung unseres zentralen Erkenntnisinteresses und der Verortung unseres Ansatzes im relevanten Forschungskontext arbeiten wir zunächst die Gemeinsamkeiten der exothetischen Formen und ihre Funktionen in den drei Kirchenbesichtigungen heraus. Dann konzentrieren wir uns auf die Unterschiede und jeweiligen Besonderheiten der drei Besichtigungen und arbeiten dabei drei eigenständige, in sich schlüssige Besichtigungskonzepte heraus. Diese drei Konzepte zeichnen sich durch die jeweils eigenständige Konstitution des Kirchenraums bei dessen Besichtigung aus. Wir konnten zeigen, dass der Kirchenraum als religiöser Funktionsraum konstituiert wird (Aurelia), als Ort von Christusdarstellungen (Saskia) und als architekturgeschichtlicher Zusammenhang (Anton). Die modellhafte Eigenständigkeit der Konzepte wurde ausschließlich durch das exothetische Sprechen deutlich. Dies weist die wahrnehmungsbegleitende Thematisierung als wichtiges Erhebungs- und Analyseverfahren für den Zugang zur situierten Kognition im Zusammenhang mit dem Vollzug komplexer kultureller Praktiken aus.