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E-raamat: Requesting Responsibility: The Morality of Grammar in Polish and English Family Interaction

(Research Fellow, Institut fur Deutsche Sprache, Mannheim)
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This book examines requests for action in everyday contexts by analyzing natural video-recorded data of everyday interaction in British English and Polish families. Requests for carrying out little jobs-passing some object or fetching items from the next room -are pervasively relevant in contexts such as preparing and consuming food, caring for and playing with children. Requests therefore provide a useful window onto general qualities of human sociality as well as on aspects of cultural diversity. J rg Zinken describes features of interactional context that people across cultures might be sensitive to in designing a request. In particular, the other person's locally observable commitment to a shared task emerges as a quality of context that systematically enters into the way a speaker builds a request. He then analyses the relationship between diversity across the grammatical resources of languages, and diversity in the action affordances provided by these structures. Focusing on grammatical structures that exist in Polish but not in English (impersonal deontic statements, a certain type of double imperative, and a grammaticalized distinction between perfective and imperfective verbal aspect), the analyses show that language-specific turn formats can index and project social orientations within the on-going interaction in culture-specific ways. By examining social actions at a fine level of grain, the book points a way toward an understanding of cultural diversity that avoids the pitfalls of cultural relativism.

Arvustused

Requesting Responsibility is a very well-written book that provides highly valuable insights into the cross-linguistic and interactional aspects of the variety of social actions belonging to the category of requesting. * Nicolas Ruytenbeek, Linguist *

Series Editor's Preface ix
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xvii
Transcription and Glossing Conventions xix
PART I Language and the morality of Requesting
1 Studying language and mind in action
3(17)
2 Requesting, responsiveness, and responsibility
20(19)
PART II Context, grammar, and the design of action
3 Nudging and appealing: Two imperative actions for Requesting
39(22)
4 The comparability of social actions across languages
61(17)
5 Two forms of responsibility: Contribution and assistance
78(15)
PART III Language-specific grammar for culture-specific actions
6 Building occasions for another's initiative: The impersonal deontic declarative trzeba x ("it is necessary to x")
93(43)
7 Calling another to social reason: The double imperative wez-V2 ("take-V2")
136(40)
8 Directing animation of pre-authored actions: Imperatives in imperfective aspect
176(45)
PART IV Requesting, action formation, and the reality of culture
9 Conclusion
221(8)
Notes 229(4)
References 233(10)
Index 243
Jörg Zinken is Research Fellow at Institut für Deutsche Sprache, Mannheim. After completing a PhD in Linguistics at the University of Bielefeld (Germany), he worked as a Senior Lecturer, then Reader in Language and Communication, in the Department of Psychology at the University of Portsmouth (UK) before joining the Institute for the German Language in Mannheim in 2014.