
Contents
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9.1 Introduction 9.1 Introduction
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9.2 A Brief History and Some Key Ideas 9.2 A Brief History and Some Key Ideas
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9.3 Intersecting Organizations of Practices 9.3 Intersecting Organizations of Practices
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9.3.1 Overall Structural Organization 9.3.1 Overall Structural Organization
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9.3.2 Turn Organization 9.3.2 Turn Organization
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9.3.3 Action and Sequence Organization 9.3.3 Action and Sequence Organization
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9.3.4 Repair Organization 9.3.4 Repair Organization
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9.3.5 Intersecting Organizations in a Single Case 9.3.5 Intersecting Organizations in a Single Case
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9.4 Interaction and Language Structure 9.4 Interaction and Language Structure
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9.4.1 Interaction and Language Structure: A Comparative, Typological Perspective 9.4.1 Interaction and Language Structure: A Comparative, Typological Perspective
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9.5 Conclusion 9.5 Conclusion
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9 Conversation Analysis
Get accessJack Sidnell (PhD Toronto, 1998) is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Toronto with a cross-appointment to the Department of Linguistics. His research focuses on the structures of talk and interaction. In addition to research in the Caribbean and Vietnam, he has examined talk in court and among young children. He is the author of Conversation Analysis: An Introduction (2010), the editor of Conversation Analysis: Comparative Perspectives (2009) and co-editor (with Makoto Hayashi and Geoffrey Raymond) of Conversational Repair and Human Understanding (2013) and (with Tanya Stivers) of The Handbook of Conversation Analysis (2012).
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Published:09 July 2015
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Abstract
Conversation analysis is an approach to social interaction that grew out of sociology but connects in various ways to concerns in other fields including linguistics. Because interaction among humans is accomplished in large part through the medium of language, conversation analysis focuses primarily on talk-in-interaction. In this brief overview of the field I outline the basic methods and analytic techniques of this approach and review some of the major findings of the last forty years of research. I conclude with some discussion of the relationship between conversation analysis and linguistics.
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