Refine
Document Type
- Article (5)
- Postprint (3)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (1)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
- Report (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (11)
Keywords
- Conversation Analysis (4)
- Interactional Linguistics (4)
- (dis)affiliation (2)
- (dis)agreement (2)
- Affiliation/Disaffiliation (2)
- Demonstrative Clefts (2)
- Konversationsanalyse (2)
- Meta-Kommunikation (2)
- Metasprache (2)
- Method (2)
- Participant Orientation (2)
- Projection (2)
- Reparaturen (2)
- Speech Rhythm and Rhythmic Analysis (2)
- Turn-Constructional Units (2)
- action recognition (2)
- confusion (2)
- forgetfulness (2)
- inferences (2)
- meta-talk (2)
- recollection (2)
- repair (2)
- stance (2)
- Interaktionale Linguistik (1)
- Methode (1)
- Projektion (1)
- Sprechrhythmus und Rhythmische Analyse (1)
- Teilnehmerorientierung (1)
- Turnkonstruktionseinheiten (1)
- answers (1)
- cesuras (1)
- conversation analysis (1)
- interactional linguistics (1)
- intonation units (1)
- oh that's right (1)
- oh that’s right (1)
- organization (1)
- phonetics (1)
- prosody (1)
- questions (1)
- responses (1)
- social action (1)
- syntax (1)
- talk-in-interaction (1)
Institute
This paper reports a problematic case of unequivocally evidencing participant orientation to the projective force of some turn-initial demonstrative wh-clefts (DCs) within the framework of Conversation Analysis (CA) and Interactional Linguistics (IL). Conducting rhythmic analyses appears helpful in this regard, in that they disclose rhythmic regularities which suggest a speaker's orientation towards a projected turn continuation. In this particular case, rhythmic analyses can therefore be shown to meaningfully complement sequential analyses and analyses of turn-design, so as to gather additional evidence for participant orientations. In conclusion, I will point to possibly more extensive relations between rhythmicity and projection and proffer a tentative outlook for the usability of rhythmic analyses as an analytic tool in CA and IL.