Difference between revisions of "Schegloff2000b"
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| + | |BibType=ARTICLE | ||
| + | |Author(s)=Emanuel A Schegloff; | ||
| + | |Title=When 'Others' Initiate Repair | ||
| + | |Tag(s)=EMCA; | ||
|Key=Schegloff2000b | |Key=Schegloff2000b | ||
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|Year=2000 | |Year=2000 | ||
|Journal=Applied Linguistics | |Journal=Applied Linguistics | ||
Revision as of 10:40, 13 October 2014
| Schegloff2000b | |
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| BibType | ARTICLE |
| Key | Schegloff2000b |
| Author(s) | Emanuel A Schegloff |
| Title | When 'Others' Initiate Repair |
| Editor(s) | |
| Tag(s) | EMCA |
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| Year | 2000 |
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| Journal | Applied Linguistics |
| Volume | 21 |
| Number | |
| Pages | 205–243 |
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Abstract
Early work on repair (Schegloff et al. 1977) had proposed that virtually all repair initiated by other than speaker of the trouble-source turn was initiated in the turn following the trouble-source turn. Such repair often came to be identified with this locus of initiation, being termed NTRI - an acronym derived from 'next turn repair initiation'. Subsequent work (Schegloff 1992) described another location in which 'other- initiated repair' is initiated-termed 'fourth position'. This paper revisits this issue and elaborates the locus of other-initiated repair. It reports on a number of environments in which 'others' initiate repair in turns later than the one directly following the trouble-source turn (without, however, occupying fourth position), and it describes several ways in which other- initiation of repair which occurs in next-turn position may be delayed within that position. These positionings of repair initiation in conversation among native speakers of English are briefly compared with a proposal by Wong that other-initiated repair by non-nativespeakers may regularly be delayed. A postscript suggests the prospect that studies of non-native speaker participation in talk-in-interaction be treated as not separable from the study of talk-in-interaction more generally.
Notes