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Preference Hierarchy Model of Same-Turn Repair Operations in Talk-In-Interaction [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 162 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 233x155x15 mm, kaal: 245 g, 14 figures
  • Sari: Pragmatic Interfaces
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Jun-2021
  • Kirjastus: Equinox Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1781798451
  • ISBN-13: 9781781798454
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 162 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 233x155x15 mm, kaal: 245 g, 14 figures
  • Sari: Pragmatic Interfaces
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Jun-2021
  • Kirjastus: Equinox Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1781798451
  • ISBN-13: 9781781798454
Teised raamatud teemal:
This book studies four self-initiated same-turn repair strategies in talk-in-interaction relative to each other, namely, recycling, replacement, insertion, and aborting. Based on a thorough analysis of a Hungarian corpus, as well as the previous results on another nine languages, a preference hierarchy model of repair operations is proposed that is able to interpret same-turn repair operations relative to each other. It reinterprets the relationship between the principle of intersubjectivity and the principle of progressivity in talk-in-interaction. Saying that the principle of maintaining progressivity also has an impact on the principle of maintaining intersubjectivity (not only vice versa), it supposes a two-way relationship between intersubjectivity and progressivity. It is found that the speakers' possible choices of repair operations relating to self-repair depend on at least three factors: the function of repair operations, the number of respects in which they override the preference for progressivity, and the morphosyntactic structure of the language used. This also highlights the interaction between grammar and pragmatics. Although the object theoretical background of the book is conversation analysis, the author attempts to show how the methodological apparatus of conversation analysis can be supplied by other methods in order to enhance the reliability of her results.
List of figures
ix
List of tables
x
Acknowledgments xii
Transcription conventions (Jefferson 2004) xiv
Abbreviations xv
1 Introduction
1(9)
1.1 The phenomenon of repair in conversation
1(6)
1.2 The aim and structure of the book
7(3)
2 The Metatheoretical Background Of The Research: Kertesz And Rakosi's (2012, 2014) P-Model Of Plausible Argumentation
10(5)
2.1 The main issues of the model
10(1)
2.2 The notion of plausibility: the uncertainty of linguistic data
11(2)
2.3 The problem-solving process
13(2)
3 The Object Theoretical Background Of The Research: Conversation Analysis
15(11)
3.1 Talk-in-interaction
15(4)
3.2 The organisation of conversational repair: What constitutes the domain of repair operation in conversation analysis?
19(7)
4 The Corpus And Methodology Of The Study
26(6)
5 Four Repair Operations
32(31)
5.1 Replacing
32(8)
5.2 Recycling
40(12)
5.3 Inserting
52(7)
5.4 Aborting
59(4)
6 Recycling And Replacing
63(36)
6.1 Recycling and replacing in nine languages
63(1)
6.2 Recycling and replacing in Hungarian
64(22)
6.3 Comparing recycling with replacing: recycling initiated after recognisable completion, restarting, and replacing
86(13)
7 Hypothesis On The Preference Hierarchy Of Repair Operations
99(23)
7.1 The notion of preference in conversation analysis
99(1)
7.2 The preference for progressivity
100(2)
7.3 Halting the progressivity of the turn by using repair operations
102(6)
7.4 The preference hierarchy model of repair operations
108(2)
7.5 Applying the preference hierarchy hypothesis to actions where speakers use more than one repair operation
110(12)
8 Conclusion And Future Directions
122(3)
Notes 125(5)
References 130(10)
Index of authors 140(2)
Index of subjects 142
Dr. Zsuzsanna Nemeth works in the Research Group for Theoretical Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. She is a member of the Hungarian Research Centre for Pragmatics, established in 2012.