Membership and language use : an investigation into the internal sequential organization of naturally occurring stories from a social interaction perspective
The research reported here constitutes an investigation into features of internal ordering of stories narrated in natural conversation. Following the work of Sacks, Schegloff and other sociological analysts of conversational structure, this report focuses on methodical ways in which utterances are i...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of British Columbia
2010
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24604 |
id |
ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-24604 |
---|---|
record_format |
oai_dc |
spelling |
ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-246042018-01-05T17:42:31Z Membership and language use : an investigation into the internal sequential organization of naturally occurring stories from a social interaction perspective Gardner, Holly Hydrology -- British Columbia -- Coast Mountains Chemical denudation -- British Columbia -- Coast Mountains The research reported here constitutes an investigation into features of internal ordering of stories narrated in natural conversation. Following the work of Sacks, Schegloff and other sociological analysts of conversational structure, this report focuses on methodical ways in which utterances are interpretable by reference to, e.g., sequential placement. An existing literature on the social organization of the telling of jokes and stories suggests that slots designed for utterance-types can be analytically identified. The present study aims to show that there is an identifiable position, story closing, which provides for orderly expectations concerning the items that may be found in such a location. The report argues that there are two independently describeable organizations which structure naturally occuring stories: the course-of-action framework and an organization oriented to giving a grounding identity to the story's teller. The former is concerned with the series of connected, temporally unfolding events, marked by beginning and end, which the story proposes to represent by a sequence of utterances. In that story-tellers exhibit selectivity and coherence, it is evident that such stories are formulated from the point of view of the character that teller allocates to self within the narration. The latter organization provides for the story's recipients a "members adequate sociological explanation" of the teller's character's point of view. It does so by assigning to teller's character a social identity which is the locus of commonly known, socially organized motives and attitudes. The story closing is a sequential position that closes off the course-of-action from the teller's character's point of view. The expectation that such an item will fill that slot can be used by the story's recipients to decide among different possible interpretations of a story's last utterance. Arts, Faculty of Sociology, Department of Graduate 2010-05-11T22:05:39Z 2010-05-11T22:05:39Z 1983 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24604 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia |
collection |
NDLTD |
language |
English |
sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
Hydrology -- British Columbia -- Coast Mountains Chemical denudation -- British Columbia -- Coast Mountains |
spellingShingle |
Hydrology -- British Columbia -- Coast Mountains Chemical denudation -- British Columbia -- Coast Mountains Gardner, Holly Membership and language use : an investigation into the internal sequential organization of naturally occurring stories from a social interaction perspective |
description |
The research reported here constitutes an investigation into features of internal ordering of stories narrated in natural conversation. Following the work of Sacks, Schegloff and other sociological analysts of conversational structure, this report focuses on methodical ways in which utterances are interpretable by reference to, e.g., sequential placement. An existing literature on the social organization of the telling of jokes and stories suggests that slots designed for utterance-types can be analytically identified. The present study aims to show that there is an identifiable position, story closing, which provides for orderly expectations concerning the items that may be found in such a location.
The report argues that there are two independently describeable organizations which structure naturally occuring stories: the course-of-action framework and an organization oriented to giving a grounding identity to the story's teller. The former is concerned with the series of connected, temporally unfolding events, marked by beginning and end, which the story proposes to represent by a sequence of utterances. In that story-tellers exhibit selectivity and coherence, it is evident that such stories are formulated from the point of view of the character that teller allocates to self within the narration. The latter organization provides for the story's recipients a "members adequate sociological explanation" of the
teller's character's point of view. It does so by assigning to teller's character a social identity which is the locus of commonly known, socially organized motives and attitudes.
The story closing is a sequential position that closes off the course-of-action from the teller's character's point of view. The expectation that such an item will fill that slot can be used by the story's recipients to decide among different possible interpretations of a story's last utterance. === Arts, Faculty of === Sociology, Department of === Graduate |
author |
Gardner, Holly |
author_facet |
Gardner, Holly |
author_sort |
Gardner, Holly |
title |
Membership and language use : an investigation into the internal sequential organization of naturally occurring stories from a social interaction perspective |
title_short |
Membership and language use : an investigation into the internal sequential organization of naturally occurring stories from a social interaction perspective |
title_full |
Membership and language use : an investigation into the internal sequential organization of naturally occurring stories from a social interaction perspective |
title_fullStr |
Membership and language use : an investigation into the internal sequential organization of naturally occurring stories from a social interaction perspective |
title_full_unstemmed |
Membership and language use : an investigation into the internal sequential organization of naturally occurring stories from a social interaction perspective |
title_sort |
membership and language use : an investigation into the internal sequential organization of naturally occurring stories from a social interaction perspective |
publisher |
University of British Columbia |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24604 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT gardnerholly membershipandlanguageuseaninvestigationintotheinternalsequentialorganizationofnaturallyoccurringstoriesfromasocialinteractionperspective |
_version_ |
1718592564974583808 |