
New Adventures in Language and Interaction
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- New Adventures in Language and Interaction
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- New adventures in language and interaction
- References
- Interlocutory logic
- Introduction
- 1. Success and failures of the "interactionist paradigm"
- 1.1 Origins of the «interactionist paradigm»
- 1.2 Fundamental theses of the interactionist paradigm
- 1.3 Properties of the «interaction order»
- 1.4 Advocacy for extending the interactionist paradigm to individual cognition
- 2. Towards a unified framework for studying talk-in-interaction
- 2.1 What theoretical requirements should the desired theoretical apparatus satisfy?
- 2.2 Interlocutory logic: A system that satisfies the above requirements
- 2.3 Conducting an analysis in interlocutory logic
- 2.4 An example: The interlocutory logic of a shift-changeover dialogue
- Conclusion
- References
- Beyond symbols
- 1. Beyond symbols
- 2. Bewitched by von Neumann machines
- 3. Complexity in social behaviour
- 4. Interaction is dynamical
- 5. The enslavement principle and the dynamics of gas lasers
- 6. Enslavement and interaction: Parallels and contrasts
- 7. Patrizia and Brunella's dynamics
- 8. Rethinking text-context relations
- 9. The distributed view
- 10. Contextualizing and the enslavement principle
- 11. Interaction & language revisited
- References
- The case for an eclectic approach to discourse-in-interaction
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Principles
- 2.1 The data
- 2.2 The rules
- 2.3 The question of units
- 2.4 Adjacency pairs
- 2.5 Speech acts
- 2.6 The sequential organization of interaction
- 2.7 Dialogical interpretation principle
- 2.8 The role of sequential placement
- 2.9 The role of context
- 3. Analyzing an example: Good evening Mr Le Pen
- 4. Concluding remarks
- References
- Grammar
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Grammar in conversation analytic(-related) work
- 3. A brief view of grammar & interaction in systemic functional linguistics
- 4. Grammar as an interactive resource
- 4.1 Interpersonal meaning
- 4.2 Ideational meaning
- 4.3 Textual meaning
- 5. Grammar influencing the trajectory of the interaction
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Researching intercultural communication
- 1. Interaction analysis and discourse-based approaches to intercultural communication
- 2. Symbolic interactionism (SI), structuration theory, and discourse-based approaches
- 3. Gumperz's contribution to an interactional conception and analysis of language
- Issues in contemporary studies of interaction
- Drawing on positioning theory and storyline analysis to understand discursive tactics in inter-group communication in non-egalitarian contexts
- Case One: A business executive in Hong Kong
- Case Two: 'Long Hair': A defiant, outspoken, grassroot, democracy fighter in Hong Kong
- Coda
- Acknowledgement
- References
- Studying interaction in order to cultivate communicative practices
- Introduction
- Action-implicative discourse analysis
- AIDA's intellectual heritage
- Distinctive features of AIDA
- AIDA example: School board meetings
- Studying interaction: A disciplinary conversation
- Disciplinary discourses
- Interactional sociolinguistics, conversation analysis, and AIDA in Their disciplinary contexts
- The distinct contribution of AIDA
- References
- Healthcare interaction as an expert communicative system
- 1. Introduction: Expertise as mediated knowledge-in-interaction
- 1.1 Access to expertise and the 'lay expert'
- 1.2 The interactional basis of professional expertise
- 2. The interactionist turn in social and human sciences
- 3. Communicative practices in healthcare encounters
- 4. Activity analysis and interaction types
- 5. An extended case study from genetic counselling
- 6. Conclusion
- Appendix
- References
- Interacting with difficulty
- 1. 'Problems' in conversation
- 2. Analyses/frameworks used to date
- 3. Connecting lexicogrammar with context
- 4. SFL's perspective on contextual issues
- 5. Lexical retrieval in interaction
- 6. Interpersonal resources
- 7. Interpreting 'problems' as pathological
- 8. Brain & language interaction
- 9. The value of interactional analysis for clinical purposes
- 10. Toward the future
- References
- Ecologies of gesture
- 1. Context
- 2. Ecologies of gesture: Body and environment
- 3. The body in communication
- 4. Historical dimensions
- 5. Dynamical systems
- References
- The neglected listener
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The selectivity of transcription
- 3. Social interaction as an ecosystem
- 3. Playscript transcription privileging speech over other semiotic media
- 4. Alternative approaches to "multimodal" transcription
- 6. Conclusion
- References
- Dialogical dynamics
- 1. Joint participation in a flow of spontaneously responsive activity: Shared 'feelings of tendency'
- 2. Developing our practices in practice
- 3. Methods for exploring how to improve our practices from within our conduct of the practices
- 4. Conclusions: From 'aboutness-thinking' to 'withness-thinking'
- References
- Author index
- Subject index
- The Pragmatics & Beyond New Series
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