Power in family discourse /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Berlin ; New York :
Mouton de Gruyter,
1991.
|
Colección: | Contributions to the sociology of language ;
63. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Contents
- Chapter One: Introduction
- 1. Language and power
- 2. Investigating power in a close-knit group
- 3. Latent and emergent networks
- 4. Interventions as interruptions in discourse
- 5. The structure of the book
- 6. The data and the participants
- 6.1 The data
- 6.2 The participants
- Chapter Two: Towards a dynamic model of discourse
- 1. Introductory
- 2. A modular approach to discourse structure
- 2.1 The exchange structure
- 2.2 Action structure
- 2.3 Ideational structure
- 2.4 The participation framework
- 2.5 The information state2.6 Levels or modules?
- 3. Turns and floors
- 4. Turns as on-record “speakings�
- 5. The floor as participation space in the discourse
- 6. Topics
- Chapter Three: Defining power
- 1. Power as inherent to verbal interaction
- 2. Self-image, status and dominance
- 3. Definitions of power
- 3.1 Power as the capacity to impose one�s will
- 3.2 The consensual view of power
- 3.3 Power as a commodity and power as a discursive force
- 3.4 Power as the capacity to achieve one�s aims
- 4. Defining the exercise of power
- Chapter Four: Intervention as interruption in social science research1. Preliminary remarks
- 2. Interruption as a theoretical term
- 3. Interruptions as simultaneous speech
- 4. Operationalising interruption as a variable in experimental research
- 5. Conceptualising the term “interruption� within conversation analysis
- 6. Taxonomies of interruption
- 7. Interpretive criteria in evaluating interruptions
- 8. Interruptions as face-threatening behaviour and the exercise of power
- 9. A return to the “prudish view� of interruptions
- 10. Interrupting as a reprehensible social activity: the lay interpretation11. Towards a definition of interruption
- Chapter Five: Types of verbal intervention in family discourse
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Turn-internal interventions
- 2.1 Off-record minimal listener responses
- 2.2 Turn-internal support and agreement
- 2.3 Looking for space on the floor: the preemptive bid
- 2.4 Responding and contradicting turninternally
- 3. Apparent interventions due to lack of synchronisation
- 4. Intervening without overlap: the “silent interruption�
- 4.1 Petering out4.2 Cutting in
- 5. Projecting turn-completion and intervening at tone unit boundaries
- 6. Blatant interventions
- 6.1 Blatant interventions of a negative kind
- 6.2 Blatant interventions of a positive kind
- Chapter Six: Latent and emergent networks
- 1. Introductory remarks
- 2. The concept of network in social science research
- 3. Morphological and interactional features of a network
- 3.1 Morphological features
- 3.2 Interactional features
- 4. Latent and emergent networks
- 5. The development of an emergent network