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Discourse Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Study of Text and Talk

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
Discourse Studies is an international peer-reviewed journal for the study of text and talk. Publishing outstanding work on the structures and strategies of written and spoken discourse, special attention is given to cross-disciplinary studies of text and talk in linguistics, anthropology, ethnomethodology, cognitive and social psychology, communication studies and law.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

No disponibles.

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde feb. 1999 / hasta dic. 2023 SAGE Journals

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

1461-4456

ISSN electrónico

1461-7080

Editor responsable

SAGE Publishing (SAGE)

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Tabla de contenidos

Conversation analysis in a US Senate Judiciary hearing: Questioning Brett Kavanaugh

Taneesh Kaur

<jats:p> Through a ‘micro’ and ‘macro’ level analysis, this study focuses on elements of questioning and question design in the Senate Judiciary hearing conducted for Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh. Specifically, two lines of questioning are analyzed: that of Kamala Harris, D. California, and that of Ted Cruz, R. Texas. Through an analysis that builds heavily on prior research that uses Conversation Analysis (CA) to understand the news interview, this study attempts to expand such research to institutional talk done by politicians in Congress. The analysis portion of the paper investigates, on a ‘micro’ level, the linguistic elements at play in each line of questioning. In the discussion section, a ‘macro’ level analysis situates the findings of this paper within the broader US political climate among the public and in terms of the growing conservatism of the Supreme Court. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Linguistics and Language; Anthropology; Language and Linguistics; Communication; Social Psychology.

Pp. 423-444

Going against the interactional tide: The accomplishment of dialogic moments from a conversation analytic perspective

Lotte van Burgsteden; Hedwig te Molder; Geoffrey Raymond

<jats:p> This article addresses a vital concern in current society by showing what participants themselves may treat as ways to transcend their differences. Actors’ shared understanding has been of longstanding interest across the social sciences. Conversation analysis (CA) treats the procedural infrastructure of interaction as the basis for participants to manage intersubjectivity. The field of dialogue studies has made occasions in which people transform their relationship by discussing their differences, central to their research project, and called them “dialogic moments.” This study draws on CA to investigate “dialogic moments,” but now through the eyes of participants themselves. Using single-case analysis, we argue that such moments require participants to go against normative orientations in talk promoting social solidarity and progressivity, by soliciting differences to understand and transcend them. This “going against the interactional tide” may explain both why dialogue is difficult to achieve and why it is appreciated by participants as dialogue. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Linguistics and Language; Anthropology; Language and Linguistics; Communication; Social Psychology.

Pp. 471-490

Power plays in action formation: The TCU-final particle ba (吧) in Mandarin Chinese conversation

Yaxin Wu; Shuai Yang

<jats:p> Using conversation analysis as its research method, this article investigates the interactional function of the particle ba in Mandarin Chinese conversation. It is argued that ba is frequently employed by its speakers to adjust deontic gradients in action sequences of directives in mundane conversation besides its function of adjusting epistemic gradients in certain action sequences. The present study claims that the agent and beneficiary of future action can only distinguish one category of directive actions from another, but each category still constitutes several member actions which contrast with one another in terms of social power. The member actions of each category form a continuum, one end of which is the action with the highest level of social power and the other end of which is the action with the lowest level of social power. There exists a normative relation between each member action of a category and the speaker’s deontic status in the real world. The particle ba is a practice of minutely adjusting the speaker’s deontic stance from a higher position to a lower one. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Linguistics and Language; Anthropology; Language and Linguistics; Communication; Social Psychology.

Pp. 491-513

Book review: Ronny Boogaart, Henrike Jansen and Maarten van Leeuwen (eds), The Language of Argumentation

Youzhi Sun

Palabras clave: Linguistics and Language; Anthropology; Language and Linguistics; Communication; Social Psychology.

Pp. 514-516

Book review: Bernd Heine, Gunther Kaltenböck, Tania Kuteva and Haiping Long, The Rise of Discourse Markers

Reza Kazemian

Palabras clave: Linguistics and Language; Anthropology; Language and Linguistics; Communication; Social Psychology.

Pp. 516-518

Book review: Ruth Wodak, The Politics of Fear: The Shameless Normalization of Far-Right Discourse

Shasha Dong

Palabras clave: Linguistics and Language; Anthropology; Language and Linguistics; Communication; Social Psychology.

Pp. 518-520

Book review: Lori Czerwionka, Rachel Showstack and Judith Liskin-Gasparro (eds), Contexts of Co-constructed Discourse: Interaction, Pragmatics, and Second Language Applications

Jinyan Li

Palabras clave: Linguistics and Language; Anthropology; Language and Linguistics; Communication; Social Psychology.

Pp. 520-522

Book review: Billy Clark, Pragmatics: The Basics

Xiaohui Rao

Palabras clave: Linguistics and Language; Anthropology; Language and Linguistics; Communication; Social Psychology.

Pp. 522-524

Epistemic stance in Korean assessment pairs: The role of evidential and non-evidential sentence-ending suffixes

Kyoungmi Ha

<jats:p> Studies in conversation analysis (CA) have shown that in assessments, various linguistic resources are used to express epistemic stance in ordinary conversation. In Korean conversation, although the evidential and non-evidential functions of sentence-ending (SE) suffixes are well recognized, little research has been done on their relation to epistemic stance and their use in assessments. In this study, using naturally-occurring conversation data and the CA framework, I analyze 59 cases of a speaker’s first assessment regarding his/her interlocutor and 49 responses to these first assessments (second assessments). I argue that in Korean assessment pairs, the evidential and non-evidential SE suffixes are used as a resource for expressing epistemic stance. The results show that 74.4% of the first assessments were marked with an evidential SE suffix whereas 71.4% of the second assessments were marked with a non-evidential SE suffix. Furthermore, certain evidential SE suffixes are used as a resource to convey a downgraded epistemic stance in first assessments whereas certain non-evidential SE suffixes are used to express epistemic primacy in second assessments. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Linguistics and Language; Anthropology; Language and Linguistics; Communication; Social Psychology.

Pp. 146144562211060

Recruitment interviews for intermediate labour markets: Identity construction under ambiguous expectations

Sanni Tiitinen; Tea Lempiälä

<jats:p> Intermediate labour markets (ILMs) provide fixed-term work opportunities and coaching for people in disadvantaged positions in labour markets. We study 46 sequences from six audio-recorded recruitment interviews for an ILM job targetted at people who have been unemployed for a prolonged period. Using an ethnomethodological approach to identity, membership categorisation analysis and conversation analysis, we study how interviewers and candidates construct and negotiate who is fit for the ILM job. We present interactional moves through which the participants jointly construct the ‘fit for the ILM job’ category and treat the candidate’s membership in it as a positive matter. Further, we demonstrate how the candidates are put in an interactionally difficult position in the interview as there are contradictory and ambiguous expectations about the ideal candidate. We discuss the results in relation to the interactional and institutional logics of a recruitment interview and suggest that enhancing the transparency might reinforce ethics of recruitment in ILMs. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Linguistics and Language; Anthropology; Language and Linguistics; Communication; Social Psychology.

Pp. 146144562211122