Moving closer to the audience: watching football on television

This article aims to describe specific practices of television spectators based on recordings of English families and friends while watching football on television. Their conversations and the talk and events on television are transcribed and analysed with interactional sociolinguistic an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gerhardt, Cornelia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Alicante 2006-11-01
Series:Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses
Online Access:https://raei.ua.es/article/view/2006-n19-moving-closer-to-the-audience-watching-football-on-television
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spelling doaj-16c3f6b808854046980ed23968fd13c72020-11-25T03:48:27ZengUniversidad de AlicanteRevista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses0214-48082171-861X2006-11-011912510.14198/raei.2006.19.084682Moving closer to the audience: watching football on televisionGerhardt, Cornelia This article aims to describe specific practices of television spectators based on recordings of English families and friends while watching football on television. Their conversations and the talk and events on television are transcribed and analysed with interactional sociolinguistic and conversation analytical methodologies. By doing 'watching football on television', the spectators constitute themselves as a community of practice. Their strategies include direct address of the television (i.e. the commentator or one of the protagonists of the game) and signalling of independent knowledge and emotions to construct their identities of football fan and expert. Conflict between these two identities may become instantiated in the talk. At times, the spectators mutually negotiate the participant role 'party to the talk at home' for the television. This is done by furnishing second pair parts to the commentators' adjacency pairs. Also, it includes respecting the commentators' turns. Having spent countless hours watching football on television, the spectators manage to carefully construct their talk around the commentators' so that one single, coherent conversation emerges. The practices show how the participants as watchers strive to become part of the spectacle using the television as a bridge to the game itself.https://raei.ua.es/article/view/2006-n19-moving-closer-to-the-audience-watching-football-on-television
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gerhardt, Cornelia
spellingShingle Gerhardt, Cornelia
Moving closer to the audience: watching football on television
Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses
author_facet Gerhardt, Cornelia
author_sort Gerhardt, Cornelia
title Moving closer to the audience: watching football on television
title_short Moving closer to the audience: watching football on television
title_full Moving closer to the audience: watching football on television
title_fullStr Moving closer to the audience: watching football on television
title_full_unstemmed Moving closer to the audience: watching football on television
title_sort moving closer to the audience: watching football on television
publisher Universidad de Alicante
series Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses
issn 0214-4808
2171-861X
publishDate 2006-11-01
description This article aims to describe specific practices of television spectators based on recordings of English families and friends while watching football on television. Their conversations and the talk and events on television are transcribed and analysed with interactional sociolinguistic and conversation analytical methodologies. By doing 'watching football on television', the spectators constitute themselves as a community of practice. Their strategies include direct address of the television (i.e. the commentator or one of the protagonists of the game) and signalling of independent knowledge and emotions to construct their identities of football fan and expert. Conflict between these two identities may become instantiated in the talk. At times, the spectators mutually negotiate the participant role 'party to the talk at home' for the television. This is done by furnishing second pair parts to the commentators' adjacency pairs. Also, it includes respecting the commentators' turns. Having spent countless hours watching football on television, the spectators manage to carefully construct their talk around the commentators' so that one single, coherent conversation emerges. The practices show how the participants as watchers strive to become part of the spectacle using the television as a bridge to the game itself.
url https://raei.ua.es/article/view/2006-n19-moving-closer-to-the-audience-watching-football-on-television
work_keys_str_mv AT gerhardtcornelia movingclosertotheaudiencewatchingfootballontelevision
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