Catalog Search
 
Advanced Search

My shopping cart cart icon
Your cart is empty

My wish list wishlist icon
Your wish list is empty



Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
Home

Sound Patterns in Interaction

Cross-linguistic studies from conversation

Edited by Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen and Cecilia E. Ford
University of Potsdam / University of Wisconsin-Madison

2004. viii, 406 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2973 1 / EUR 130.00
978 1 58811 570 6 / USD 195.00
Add to shopping cart

e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9499 9 / EUR 130.00 / USD 195.00
Ordering information

Add to wish list

This collection of original papers by eminent phoneticians, linguists and sociologists offers the most recent findings on phonetic design in interactional discourse available in an edited collection. The chapters examine the organization of phonetic detail in relation to social actions in talk-in-interaction based on data drawn from diverse languages: Japanese, English, Finnish, and German, as well as from diverse speakers: children, fluent adults and adults with language loss. Because similar methodology is deployed for the investigation of similar conversational tasks in different languages, the collection paves the way towards a cross-linguistic phonology for conversation. The studies reported in the volume make it clear that language-specific constraints are at work in determining exactly which phonetic and prosodic resources are deployed for a given purpose and how they articulate with grammar in different cultures and speech communities.


Table of contents

List of contributors
vii–viii
Introduction
Conversation and phonetics: Essential connections
Cecilia E. Ford and Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen
3–25
Practices and resources for turn transition
Non-modal voice quality and turn-taking in Finnish
Richard Ogden
29–62
Prosody for making transition-relevance places in Japanese conversation: The case of turns unmarked by utterance-final objects
Hiroko Tanaka
63–96
Turn-final intonation in English
Beatrice Szczepek Reed
97–117
Prosodic resources, turn-taking and overlap in children's talk-in-interaction
Bill Wells and Juliette Corrin
119–144
Projecting and expanding turns
On some interactional and phonetic properties of increments to turns in talk-in-interaction
Gareth Walker
147–169
Prolixity as adaptation: Prosody and turn-taking in German conversation with a fluent aphasic
Peter Auer and Barbara Rönfeldt
171–200
The 'upward' staircase intonation contour in the Berlin vernacular: An example of the analysis of regionalized intonation as an interactional resource
Margret Selting
201–231
"Getting past no": Sequence, action and sound production in the projection of no-initiated turns
Cecilia E. Ford, Barbara A. Fox and John Hellermann
233–269
Connecting actions across turns
'Repetition' repairs: The relationship of phonetic structure and sequence organization
Traci S. Walker-Curl
273–298
Indexing 'no news' with stylization in Finnish
Richard Ogden, Auli Hakulinen and Liisa Tainio
299–334
Prosody and sequence organization in English conversation: The case of new beginnings
Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen
335–376
Getting back to prior talk: and-uh (m) as a back-connecting device in British and American English
John Local
377–400
Index
401–404


Sound Patterns in Interaction constitutes a significant step toward expanding the scope of Conversation Analysis to include languages other than English. Aspects of sequencing which are language- or variety-specific are highlighted throughout the volume, pointing the way toward a cross-linguistic 'phonology of conversation'. Concomitantly, readers are encouraged to view linguistics and Conversation Analysis as aspects of a single disciplinary field whose aim it is to illuminate the natural symbiosis between speech sound and the social interactions in which they are used.
Elizabeth Shipley, UCSB, in Discourse & Society Vol. 19:1.