
Positioning in Media Dialogue
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Content
- Positioning in Media Dialogue
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Dedication
- Table of contents
- Abstract
- Acknowledgements
- 1. The news interview
- 1.1 Approaches to the study of news interviews
- 1.2 Introducing the corpus
- 1.3 Presentation and transcription conventions
- 2. The interactional construction of positions in discourse
- 2.1 Positioning
- 2.2 Positioning and role
- 2.3 Role and identity
- 2.3.1 Role, identity, status: A sociological orientation
- 2.3.2 Membership categories and identity: Discourse orientation
- 2.4 The perception of role and identity in media talk
- 2.5 Multiplicity of roles
- 2.6 Two role types: Social and interactional
- 2.7 "Making relevant" in and through discourse
- 3. Positioning through challenge
- 3.1 Defining challenge
- 3.2 Two challenge-types
- 3.3 Who challenges whom?
- 3.4 Challenge potential
- 3.5 Summary
- II. Discourse patterns
- 4. Interactional roles: Normative expectations and discourse norms
- 4.1 Preliminaries
- 4.2 Normative expectations
- 4.3 Discourse norms
- 4.4 Rights and obligations: A case of wishful thinking
- 4.5 Conversationalisation and positioning
- 5. Irony
- 5.1 Preliminaries
- 5.2 Cues and clues for ironic interpretation
- 5.3 Ironists and targets
- 5.3.1 Interviewers target interviewees
- 5.3.2 Interviewees target a third party
- 5.4 The locus of irony: Interactional role
- 5.5 Does irony reduce threat to face or enhance it?
- 6. Framing challenge through terms of address
- 6.1 Preliminaries
- 6.2 Explicit other-positioning: Addresses and references in the openings and closings
- 6.3 Framing conflict and challenge: Addresses in mid-position
- 6.3.1 Interactional positioning through deference
- 6.3.2 Framing challenge through solidarity
- 6.4 Positioning through terms of address
- III. Case studies
- 7. Individual intentions and collective purpose
- 7.1 Ritual blows of peace-making: Individual intentions and collective purpose
- 7.2 Individual intentions: Challenge and conflict
- 7.2.1 Interviewee's loop-responses
- 7.2.2 Meta-comments and interruptions
- 7.2.3 Reciprocal irony
- 7.2.4 Exchanging last blows: The closing
- 7.3 Collective direction: Collaboration and joint endeavor
- 8. Negotiating social positioning: The interviewee's political role in context
- 9. Intertwined positionings
- 9.1 Interactional co-operation: Turns 01-10
- 9.2 Reciprocal adversative positioning: Turns 11-30
- 9.3 Reciprocal challenges at their peak
- 9.4 Summary
- Part IV. Conclusion
- 1. Two methodological comments
- 1.1 Methodology and findings: A two-way street
- 1.2 Units of analysis
- 2. Positioning, role and challenge: An interactional view
- 3. The discursive nature of positioning
- 4. News interviews in the Israeli context
- 4.1 Symmetry and reciprocity
- 4.2 High informativeness
- 5. Desideratum
- References
- Appendix A
- Appendix B
- Appendix C
- Author index
- Subject index
- The series Dialogue Studies
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