The Cambridge Handbook of Methods in Conversation Analysis
Herausgeber: Robinson, Jeffrey D.; Kendrick, Kobin H.; Clift, Rebecca
The Cambridge Handbook of Methods in Conversation Analysis
Herausgeber: Robinson, Jeffrey D.; Kendrick, Kobin H.; Clift, Rebecca
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"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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"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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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 1030
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Dezember 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 250mm x 175mm x 59mm
- Gewicht: 1917g
- ISBN-13: 9781108837941
- ISBN-10: 1108837948
- Artikelnr.: 70289412
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 1030
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Dezember 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 250mm x 175mm x 59mm
- Gewicht: 1917g
- ISBN-13: 9781108837941
- ISBN-10: 1108837948
- Artikelnr.: 70289412
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
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.
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.
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.
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.