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Retrieving, redoing and resuscitating turns in conversation

  • John Local , Peter Auer and Paul Drew
View more publications by John Benjamins Publishing Company
Prosody in Interaction
This chapter is in the book Prosody in Interaction

Abstract

Not infrequently in conversation, a speaker launches an activity which in some way or other is intercepted by another co-participant, or is otherwise unsuccessful, such that it receives no proper uptake. Activities of this kind may simply be lost. However, speakers who did not succeed may also ‘try again’. In this paper, we describe three ways of ‘trying again’. We will show that apart from occurring in different sequential positions, they also display different constellations of prosodic and other formal features. While two of the relaunchings are related to the preceding first attempt by a systematic form shift, either upgrading or downgrading them, the third type appears in a variety of forms and will be shown to be formally unrelated to the resuscitated first activity.

Abstract

Not infrequently in conversation, a speaker launches an activity which in some way or other is intercepted by another co-participant, or is otherwise unsuccessful, such that it receives no proper uptake. Activities of this kind may simply be lost. However, speakers who did not succeed may also ‘try again’. In this paper, we describe three ways of ‘trying again’. We will show that apart from occurring in different sequential positions, they also display different constellations of prosodic and other formal features. While two of the relaunchings are related to the preceding first attempt by a systematic form shift, either upgrading or downgrading them, the third type appears in a variety of forms and will be shown to be formally unrelated to the resuscitated first activity.

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Foreword ix
  4. Preface xi
  5. List of contributors xix
  6. Introduction
  7. Prosody in interaction 3
  8. Future prospects of research on prosody: The need for publicly available corpora 41
  9. Part I. Prosody and other levels of linguistic organization in interaction
  10. The phonetic constitution of a turn-holding practice 51
  11. Rush-throughs as social action 73
  12. Prosodic constructions in making complaints 81
  13. The relevance of context to the performing of a complaint 105
  14. Prosodic variation in responses 109
  15. Retrieving, redoing and resuscitating turns in conversation 131
  16. Doing confirmation with ja/nee hoor 161
  17. Part II. Prosodic units as a structuring device in interaction
  18. Intonation phrases in natural conversation 191
  19. Making units 213
  20. Speaking dramatically 217
  21. Commentating fictive and real sports 239
  22. Tonal repetition and tonal contrast in English carer-child interaction 243
  23. Repetition and contrast across action sequences 263
  24. Part III. Prosody and other semiotic resources in interaction
  25. Communicating emotion in doctor-patient interaction 269
  26. Double function of prosody: Processes of meaning-making in narrative reconstructions of epileptic seizures 295
  27. Multimodal expressivity of the Japanese response particle Huun 303
  28. Response tokens – A multimodal approach 333
  29. Multiple practices for constructing laughables 339
  30. Multimodal laughing 369
  31. Constructing meaning through prosody in aphasia 373
  32. Further perspectives on cooperative semiosis 395
  33. Author index 401
  34. Subject index 403
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