Conversation Analysis

Conversation analysis is the study of talk in interaction. Its aim is to see how people bring off the daily work of their lives, whether institutional (in the school, doctor's surgery, government office or any other place of work) or casual. Inspired by ethnomethodology, it was developed in the late 1960s and early 1970s principally by the sociologist Harvey Sacks and, among others, his close associates Emanuel A. Schegloff and Gail Jefferson. Sacks died early in his career, but his work was championed by others in his field, and CA has now become an established force in sociology, linguistics and psychology. It is particularly influential in interactional sociolinguistics, discourse analysis and discursive psychology, as well as being a coherent discipline in its own right.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
geographic coordinate conversion
motif
climbing equipment
cyanosis
white book
johnny sain
sirtaki
steve dagora
one sided limit
gregory crewdson
nizkor project
lynette woodard
mertens conjecture
the dish
bishop asbury cottage
calenardhon
gerrard winstanley
kent conrad
canada! mon pays, mes amours
cirion
fredrik reinfeldt
byron dorgan
northmen
rohirrim
linear differential equation
alexei rykov
dawn fraser
teatro yaguez
obituary
henri georges clouzot
kedermister library
robert young
linear animal
lee, london
hazerfan (band)
rosenallis
marilyn horne
hammerfest
murat bayhan
nathaniel bliss
goktan kural
beth hada
fo tan
wood thrush