The role of text in televideo cybersex
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Rodney H. Jones
Abstract
Televideo cybersex provides a unique example of the ways meanings are instantiated, identities constructed, and relationships negotiated across different semiotic modes. This article explores the role of verbal messages in these multimodal exchanges, examining the specific interactional functions they perform. Text, it is argued, plays a rather unique role in this particular kind of interaction. Unlike ordinary face-to-face conversation, in which the body (posture, gestures, gaze) usually plays more of an ancillary role, in televideo cybersex, the bodily performance is primary, with verbal messages functioning to contextualize physical actions. Text is used to help increase the sense of ‘presence’ participants feel, to regulate the rhythm of the unfolding interaction, to help manage the orderly exchange of information, and to create narrative frames within which bodily displays can be interpreted and made coherent.
© 2008 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, D-10785 Berlin
Artikel in diesem Heft
- The role of text in televideo cybersex
- Discriminating political styles as genres: A corpus study exploring Hariman's theory of political style
- Sequence organization as local and longitudinal achievement
- Manipulative silence and social representation in the closing arguments of a child sexual abuse case
Artikel in diesem Heft
- The role of text in televideo cybersex
- Discriminating political styles as genres: A corpus study exploring Hariman's theory of political style
- Sequence organization as local and longitudinal achievement
- Manipulative silence and social representation in the closing arguments of a child sexual abuse case