Negotiating Participant Status in Participation Frameworks

It is not always easy to find your place within a conversation. In this brief piece, I suggest that participant status (i.e., speaker and hearer roles) within a participation framework, is not always agreed upon by all members, but can be asserted, resisted, and otherwise negotiated. In an effort to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nancy Boblett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Columbia University Libraries 2012-05-01
Series:Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL
Online Access:https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/SALT/article/view/1377
id doaj-48bc7fcdac3742eba26e34e35da299c8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-48bc7fcdac3742eba26e34e35da299c82020-11-25T02:01:36ZengColumbia University LibrariesStudies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL2689-193X2012-05-0112110.7916/salt.v12i1.1377Negotiating Participant Status in Participation FrameworksNancy BoblettIt is not always easy to find your place within a conversation. In this brief piece, I suggest that participant status (i.e., speaker and hearer roles) within a participation framework, is not always agreed upon by all members, but can be asserted, resisted, and otherwise negotiated. In an effort to address this, I will present an excerpt taken from videotaped recordings of naturally-occurring talk among three colleagues. The line-by-line analysis used in Conversation Analysis (CA) will allow a more nuanced look into what happens when a participant self-selects as speaker, and tries to either maintain or move into a central position in the participation framework. In addition to a line-by-line reading of interaction, CA allows us not only to highlight intonation and loudness of speech, but also to focus on pauses within a turn and gaps between turns. This helps clarify the various strategies that hearers may use to resist or block a move by a speaker. https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/SALT/article/view/1377
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nancy Boblett
spellingShingle Nancy Boblett
Negotiating Participant Status in Participation Frameworks
Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL
author_facet Nancy Boblett
author_sort Nancy Boblett
title Negotiating Participant Status in Participation Frameworks
title_short Negotiating Participant Status in Participation Frameworks
title_full Negotiating Participant Status in Participation Frameworks
title_fullStr Negotiating Participant Status in Participation Frameworks
title_full_unstemmed Negotiating Participant Status in Participation Frameworks
title_sort negotiating participant status in participation frameworks
publisher Columbia University Libraries
series Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL
issn 2689-193X
publishDate 2012-05-01
description It is not always easy to find your place within a conversation. In this brief piece, I suggest that participant status (i.e., speaker and hearer roles) within a participation framework, is not always agreed upon by all members, but can be asserted, resisted, and otherwise negotiated. In an effort to address this, I will present an excerpt taken from videotaped recordings of naturally-occurring talk among three colleagues. The line-by-line analysis used in Conversation Analysis (CA) will allow a more nuanced look into what happens when a participant self-selects as speaker, and tries to either maintain or move into a central position in the participation framework. In addition to a line-by-line reading of interaction, CA allows us not only to highlight intonation and loudness of speech, but also to focus on pauses within a turn and gaps between turns. This helps clarify the various strategies that hearers may use to resist or block a move by a speaker.
url https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/SALT/article/view/1377
work_keys_str_mv AT nancyboblett negotiatingparticipantstatusinparticipationframeworks
_version_ 1724956810328145920