Identities in TalkCharles Antaki, Sue Widdicombe SAGE, 1998年8月19日 - 240 頁 `Identity′ attracts some of social science′s liveliest and most passionate debates. Theory abounds on matters as disparate as nationhood, ethnicity, gender politics and culture. However, there is considerably less investigation into how such identity issues appear in the fine grain of everyday life. This book gathers together, in a collection of chapters drawing on ethnomethodology and conversation analysis, arguments which show that identities are constructed `live′ in the actual exchange of talk. By closely examining tapes and transcripts of real social interactions from a wide range of situations, the volume explores just how it is that a person can be ascribed to a category and what features about that category are consequential for the interaction. |
內容
1 | |
15 | |
Chapter 3 How GunOwners Accomplish Being Deadly Average | 34 |
The Interactional Management of Category Membership and NonMembership ... | 52 |
Fagin and the Terminally Dim | 71 |
Part II Discourse Identities and Social Identities | 87 |
Chapter 7 Mobilizing Discourse and Social Identities in Knowledge Talk | 107 |
Chapter 8 Talk and Identity in Divorce Mediation | 121 |
Part III Membership Categories and their Practical and Institutional Relevance | 133 |
Chapter 10 Being Ascribed and Resisting Membership of an Ethnic Group | 151 |
Chapter 11 Handling Incoherence According to the Speakers OnSight Categorization | 171 |
Part IV Epilogue | 191 |
207 | |
219 | |
常見字詞
action activities Ahmad alignment Anne Dunnett call-taker caller categorization theory category contrast category membership category-bound chapter claim clarification Connie Connie’s context conversation analysis counsellor Coupland cultural defined deviance difficulties discourse identities discursive psychology display divorce mediation educational psychological educational psychologist emergency telephone ethnic categorization ethnomethodology example extract Fagin first formulation gothic subculture gun-owner Harvey Sacks hearable hehh identified identity ascription identity category implication interaction interlocutors interviewer invoked Jimmy kind Lyn’s membership categorization Mmhmm orientation Paolo participants particular people’s person postmodern problem produced punk question recipient reference relevant response Sacks Sacks’s sense sequence significant sitter situated identities social categories social group social identity social psychology someone sort speaker specific spermbo Stokes Stokes’s street punk subcultural talk Ted’s terminally dim things turn utterance Vania Widdicombe and Wooffitt yeah Zoe’s