This book presents the first collection of conversation analytic studies addressed exclusively to issues of inequality and injustice. It offers a broad depiction of how inequality and injustice are reproduced, resisted and transformed in our daily life; together the chapters produce a forensic analysis of how participants enact discriminatory ideologies, negotiate systemic power imbalances, and pursue social change in and through the nuances of their interactions. The authors draw on audio and video recordings of interaction in a wide range of social settings, ranging from classrooms to family dinners, and political town halls to television sitcoms. The book demonstrates the power of conversation analysis to tackle issues of social (in)justice and (in)equality and launches critical conversation analysis as a distinct empirical program dedicated to systematically investigating and promoting inclusion and equity in the minute details of everyday interaction.
This book presents the first collection of conversation analytic studies addressed exclusively to issues of inequality and injustice. The chapters produce a forensic analysis of how participants enact discriminatory ideologies, negotiate systemic power imbalances, and pursue social change in and through the nuances of their interactions.
Arvustused
At last, a volume devoted to the promise of CA and MCA for equity-oriented praxis in applied linguistics. Waring and Tadic's timely collection substantively advances the debate about motivated CA and MCA, and will be of relevance to apprentice and experienced researchers concerned with how inequity and social injustice are produced, reproduced, and resisted in interaction. * Steven Talmy, University of British Columbia, Canada * This is an exceptionally timely and important collection of critical CA work that powerfully demonstrates how inequalities and injustice are embedded and reproduced in talk-in-interaction. It is essential reading for anyone interested in the everyday production of discrimination and how it can be interactionally exposed and challenged. * Susan Speer, University of Manchester, UK * For decades, issues of power, inequality, injustice, prejudice and discrimination have been simmering in the literature of Conversation Analysis. Now, in this remarkable volume, the pot that contains these issues has come to a full boil. The studies by seasoned authors and collaborators leave basic research in CA with its own continued integrity, but the cumulative, spillover effects of Critical Conversation Analysis will shift analytic attention in the field immediately and for years to come. Readers take note! * Douglas W. Maynard, Professor Emeritus, University of Wisconsin, USA *
Muu info
Showcases the power of conversation analysis as a methodology to tackle issues of social (in)justice and (in)equity
Contributors
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Series Editors' Preface
Chapter
1. Nadja Tadic and Hansun Zhang Waring: Introduction
Part 1: Reproducing Inequality and Injustice
Chapter
2. Nadja Tadic, Hansun Zhang Waring and Elizabeth Reddington: Investigating Raciolinguistic Ideologies in Interaction
Chapter
3. Elliott M. Hoey and Chase Wesley Raymond: Racist Renditions: Mock Language in Interaction
Chapter
4. Scott Saft: Talk in Local News Broadcasts: Reinforcing Negative Views towards the Hawaiian Language
Chapter
5. Catherine L. Tam, Kevin A. Whitehead and Geoffrey Raymond: Inequality in Action: Granting Emergency Service Requests in a Highly Resource-Constrained Context
Chapter
6. Di Yu: Delegitimizing the 'Other' at US Congressional Town Hall Meetings
Part 2: Resisting Inequality and Injustice
Chapter
7. Innhwa Park and Santoi Wagner: Negotiating Power Inequalities in Joint Decision-Making in a Faculty Meeting
Chapter
8. Sarah Chepkirui Creider: I'm Just Saying: Being Explicit in a Mixed-Race Conversation about Racism
Chapter
9. Lillian Cheeks and Kevin A. Whitehead: Using Racial Incompetence as a Comedic Device and Tacit Method of Anti-Racist Education
Part 3: A Final Argument
Chapter
10. Elizabeth Stokoe and Saul Albert: 'Just a Method in Search of a Problem?' The Power of Conversation Analysis
Index
Hansun Zhang Waring is Professor in the Applied Linguistics and TESOL Program, Teachers College, Columbia University, USA. She is founder of LANSI (The Language and Social Interaction Working Group) and the co-editor of Storytelling in Multilingual Settings: A Conversation Analytic Perspective (with J. Wong, Routledge, 2021).
Nadja Tadic is Assistant Professor in the Department of Linguistics, Georgetown University, USA. Her research addresses issues of diversity, discrimination and social (in)justice through the lens of critically motivated conversation analysis and membership categorization analysis.