The Call-on-Hold as Conversational Resource
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Jack Bilmes
Abstract
This paper demonstrates how a call-on-hold is used to accomplish some delicate interactional work involving a talk-show host, a co-host, and a guest expert. In particular, it shows how a proscribed topic is reanimated. The caller herself plays a passive role; it is the call rather than the caller that is crucial. The call is used ‘subversively’, to create a false sense of what is going on. The paper aims to illuminate both some general properties of calls-on-hold and special functions of such calls as they occur on call-in talk shows. In order to understand how the call-on-hold is being used in the instance under consideration, it was necessary to examine call-openings as they occur on this show and, in particular, the common occurrence of the ‘second summons’, as well as a variety of other matters (e.g., story prefaces, self-interruption) of sequential import.
© Walter de Gruyter
Articles in the same Issue
- The Call-on-Hold as Conversational Resource
- Modern Conscience: Modalities of Obligation in Research Genres
- Interactive Media Systems: Influence Strategies in Television Home Shopping
- Speaking Authoritatively: On the Modality and Factuality of Expert Talk in Greek Television Studio Discussion Programs
- Disagreement and Opposition in Multigenerational Interviews with Greek-Australian Mothers and Daughters
Articles in the same Issue
- The Call-on-Hold as Conversational Resource
- Modern Conscience: Modalities of Obligation in Research Genres
- Interactive Media Systems: Influence Strategies in Television Home Shopping
- Speaking Authoritatively: On the Modality and Factuality of Expert Talk in Greek Television Studio Discussion Programs
- Disagreement and Opposition in Multigenerational Interviews with Greek-Australian Mothers and Daughters