Conversation Analysis (CA) is one of the predominant methods for the detailed study of human social interaction. Bringing together thirty-four chapters written by a team of world-renowned experts, this Handbook represents the first comprehensive overview of conversation-analytic methods. Topics include how to collect, manage, and transcribe data; how to explore data in search of possible phenomena; how to form and develop collections of phenomena; how to use different types of evidence to analyze data; how to code and quantify interaction; and how to apply, publish, and communicate findings to those who stand to benefit from them. Each method is introduced clearly and systematically, and examples of CA in different languages and cultures are included, to show how it can be applied in multiple settings. Comprehensive yet accessible, it is essential reading for researchers and advanced students in disciplines such as Linguistics, Sociology, Anthropology, Communication and Psychology.
Bringing together research from a team of experts in the field, this is the first Handbook to provide a dedicated overview of the methodologies of Conversation Analysis. It is essential reading for academic researchers and advanced students in a wide range of disciplines, including Linguistics, Sociology, Anthropology, Communication and Psychology.
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'This Handbook is a comprehensive tool for training and research, which will be very useful for both novices as well as experienced scholars in the field. It focuses on the research processes and methodology of CA, and these processes are illustrated and discussed with reference to prominent work in all the major research fields of CA/IL.' Margret Selting, Professor Emerita at the University of Potsdam, Germany 'This is not an orthodox handbook but a novel and practical research manual on how to do conversation analysis. It will provide practical steps that both students and scholars can apply to their research.' Gregory Matoesian, Professor, Department of Criminology, Law & Justice & Department of Linguistics, University of Illinois at Chicago
Muu info
With contributions from world-renowned experts, this volume is the first to provide a complete overview of conversation-analytic methods.
Part I. Introduction:
1. Methods in conversation analysis Chase Wesley
Raymond, Rebecca Clift, Kobin H. Kendrick and Jeffrey D. Robinson; Part II.
Points of Departure:
2. Conversation-analytic methods of data collection
Elliott M. Hoey and Joseph C. Webb;
3. Collecting interaction data in the
'lab' versus the 'field': rationale, ramifications, and recommendations
Jeffrey D. Robinson;
4. Working with data I: field recordings Saul Albert and
Emily Hofstetter;
5. Multimodal transcription as process and analysis:
capturing the audible and visible Florence Oloff and Alexa Hepburn;
6.
Discovering a candidate phenomenon Rebecca Clift and Jenny Mandelbaum;
7.
Data Sessions Emma Betz; Part III. Collections:
8. Working with collections
in conversation analysis Steven E. Clayman;
9. Working with data II: clips
and collections Emily Hofstetter and Saul Albert;
10. History of a
collection: repetition repairs Traci Walker;
11. Developing a collection:
apologies Paul Drew;
12. Developing a collection: coordination of embodied
conduct with darf/kann ich X? 'may/can I?' in German Arnulf Deppermann and
Alexandra Gubina; Part IV. Evidence:
13. Evidencing conversation-analytic
claims: how participants orient to social action Chase Wesley Raymond and
Jeffrey D. Robinson;
14. Evidence for claims about interactants' sense-making
processes Anita M. Pomerantz;
15. Conversation analysis as a comparative
methodology Paul Drew, Ana Cristina Ostermann and Chase Wesley Raymond;
16.
The epistemics of epistemics: validating claims about epistemic stance in
conversation analysis John Heritage;
17. Coding and statistically associating
inter-action to advance conversation-analytic findings Jeffrey D. Robinson;
Part V. Avenues into Action:
18. Single-case analysis Aug Nishizaka;
19.
Ethnomethodology, conversation analysis, and the study of interaction in
everyday life Douglas W. Maynard and Virginia Teas Gill;
20. Analyzing
categorial phenomena in talk-in-interaction Kevin A. Whitehead, Geoffrey
Raymond and Elizabeth Stokoe;
21. Where the action is: positioning matters in
interaction Danielle Pillet-Shore;
22. Analyzing particles Galina B. Bolden;
23. Analyzing grammar in social interaction Barbara Fox, Elizabeth
Couper-Kuhlen, Barbara A. Fox, Chase Wesley Raymond, Marja-Leena Sorjonen and
Sandra A. Thompson;
24. Listening to talk-in-interaction: ways of observing
speech Richard Ogden;
25. Multimodality in conversation analysis Lorenza
Mondada;
26. System-oriented analysis: moving from singular practices to
organizations of practice Kobin H. Kendrick;
27. Comparing across languages
and cultures Makoto Hayashi and Stephanie Hyeri Kim;
28. Methodological
considerations when using conversation analysis to investigate institutional
interaction Merran Toerien;
29. Methods for 'applying' conversation analysis
Rebecca K. Barnes;
30. Using conversation analytic research methods in the
study of atypical populations Ray Wilkinson; Part VI. Situating and Reporting
Findings:
31. CA across disciplines: connecting and engaging through
publishing Rebecca Clift, Rod Gardner, Rose McCabe, Anssi Peräkylä and
Jonathan Potter;
32. What do journal editors look for in publishing CA work?
Charles Antaki, Leelo Keevallik and Elwys de Stefani;
33. Communicating
findings to non-CA professionals Chloe Shaw; Part VII. Looking Forward:
34.
Opening up avenues into action: future directions in conversation analysis
Kobin H. Kendrick, Rebecca Clift, Chase Wesley Raymond and Jeffrey D.
Robinson; Appendices: Appendix
1. Jeffersonian transcription conventions
Rebecca Clift, Kobin H. Kendrick, Chase Wesley Raymond and Jeffrey D.
Robinson; Appendix
2. Multimodal transcription conventions Lorenza Mondada.
Jeffrey D. Robinson is Professor in the Department of Communication at Portland State University. Rebecca Clift is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Language and Linguistics at the University of Essex. Kobin H. Kendrick is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Language and Linguistic Science at the University of York. Chase Wesley Raymond is Associate Professor in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and Associate Clinical Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Colorado, Anschutz School of Medicine.