How far is extra-textual material necessary to ethnomethodology, conversation analysis and contemporary language-oriented social constructivism? That question emerged as the theme of the first international conference of the Discourse Analysis Research Group. It provoked varied and sometimes incompatible responses from those present, including some of the most illustrious scholars currently engaged in the study of naturally occurring talk. This collection of responses highlights disagreements and stimulates debate.
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978-0-8039-4253-0 (9780803942530)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Introduction
The Understanding of Language Use in Everyday Life - Rodney Watson
Is There a Common Ground?
Life After CA - Michael Moerman
An Ethnographer's Autobiography
Achieving Context - Don H Zimmerman
Openings in Emergency Calls
The Work of a (Scientific) Demonstration - Dusan Bjelic and Michael Lynch
Respecifying Newton's and Goethe's Theories of Prismatic Color
Mishearings - Jack Bilmes
The Study of Extended Sequences - George Psathas
The Case of the Garden Lesson
Normative Order in Collaborative Computer Editing - James L Heap
Psychiatric Records as Transformations of Other Texts - Tony Hak
Recognizing References to Deviance in Referral Talk - Stephen Hester
Two Incommensurable, Asymmetrically Alternate Technologies of Social Analysis - Harold Garfinkel and D Lawrence Wieder