Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £81.39 GBP
Regular price £90.00 GBP Sale price £81.39 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

Conversational Repair and Human Understanding

A state-of-the art review of conversational repair, with contributions from internationally recognized leaders in the field of conversation analysis.

Makoto Hayashi (Edited by), Geoffrey Raymond (Edited by), Jack Sidnell (Edited by)

9781107002791, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 17 January 2013

396 pages, 14 b/w illus. 3 tables
23.5 x 15.6 x 2.5 cm, 0.7 kg

'Conversational repair has been a classic research topic in conversation analysis, and the present volume counts as one of the best collections of studies on this topic … Conversational Repair and Human Understanding is a new classic of conversational repair research.' Xiaoli Zhou and Guodong Yu, Shanxi University

Humans are imperfect, and problems of speaking, hearing and understanding are pervasive in ordinary interaction. This book examines the way we 'repair' and correct such problems as they arise in conversation and other forms of human interaction. The first book-length study of this topic, it brings together a team of scholars from the fields of anthropology, communication, linguistics and sociology to explore how speakers address problems in their own talk and that of others, and how the practices of repair are interwoven with non-verbal aspects of communication such as gaze and gesture, across a variety of languages. Specific chapters highlight intersections between repair and epistemics, repair and turn construction, and repair and action formation. Aimed at researchers and students in sociolinguistics, speech communication, conversation analysis and the broader human and social sciences to which they contribute - anthropology, linguistics, psychology and sociology - this book provides a state-of-the-art review of conversational repair, while charting new directions for future study.

1. Conversational repair and human understanding: an introduction Makoto Hayashi, Geoffrey Raymond and Jack Sidnell
2. Ten operations in self-initiated, same-turn repair Emanuel A. Schegloff
3. Self-repair and action construction Paul Drew, Traci Walker and Richard Ogden
4. On the place of hesitating in delicate formulations: a turn constructional infrastructure for collaborative indiscretion Gene H. Lerner
5. One question after another: same-turn-repair in the formation of yes/no type initiating actions Geoffrey Raymond and John Heritage
6. On the interactional import of self-repair in the courtroom Tanya Romaniuk and Susan Ehrlich
7. Defensive mechanisms: I-mean prefaced utterances in complaint and other conversational sequences Douglas W. Maynard
8. Availability as a trouble source in directive-response sequences Mardi Kidwell
9. Epistemics, action formation, and other-initiation of repair: the case of partial questioning repeats Jeffrey D. Robinson
10. Proffering insertable elements: a study of other-initiated repair in Japanese Makoto Hayashi and Kaoru Hayano
11. Alternative, subsequent descriptions Jack Sidnell and Rebecca Barnes
12. Huh? What? - A first survey in 21 languages N. J. Enfield, Mark Dingemanse, Julija Baranova, Joe Blythe, Penelope Brown, Tyko Dirksmeyer, Paul Drew, Simeon Floyd, Sonja Gipper, Rósa Gísladóttir, Gertie Hoymann, Kobin H. Kendrick, Stephen C. Levinson, Lilla Magyari, Elizabeth Manrique, Giovanni Rossi, Lila San Roque and Francisco Torreira.

Subject Areas: Semantics, discourse analysis, etc [CFG], Sociolinguistics [CFB]

View full details