Difference between revisions of "Mondada2014h"

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|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|BibType=ARTICLE
|Author(s)=Lorenza Mondada;  
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|Author(s)=Lorenza Mondada;
 
|Title=Multimodal analysis of walking and talking
 
|Title=Multimodal analysis of walking and talking
|Tag(s)=EMCA; body; walking; organization; talking; Gestalts; Multimodal;  
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|Tag(s)=EMCA; body; walking; organization; talking; Gestalts; Multimodal;
 
|Key=Mondada2014h
 
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|Year=2014
 
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|Volume=4
 
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|Pages= 357–403
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|Pages=357–403
|Abstract=Studies of gesture and language, multimodality, and embodied talk constitute a  
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|URL=http://www.jbe-platform.com/content/journals/10.1075/ld.4.3.02mon
blooming domain that revisits our conceptions of language as well as of hu-
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|DOI=10.1075/ld.4.3.02mon
man action. However, research until now has focused on the upper part of the  
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|Abstract=Studies of gesture and language, multimodality, and embodied talk constitute a blooming domain that revisits our conceptions of language as well as of human action. However, research until now has focused on the upper part of the body — mainly on gesture, gaze, head movements and facial expressions. This paper contributes to and expands this line of research by looking at the lower part of the body — in practices of walking and talking — and by demonstrating how the entire body is crucially involved in the organisation of social interaction. Adopting a conversation analytic perspective, the paper is based on video recordings of people talking and walking in a garden. The study shows how the entire body moves in significant and systematic ways, within complex multimodal Gestalts. In particular it shows how walking both reflexively shapes and is shaped by emergent turn formatting, ongoing sequence organization and the dynamic organization of participant frameworks.
body — mainly on gesture, gaze, head movements and facial expressions. Tis
 
paper contributes to and expands this line of research by looking at the lower  
 
part of the body — in practices of walking and talking — and by demonstrating  
 
how the entire body is crucially involved in the organisation of social interac-
 
tion. Adopting a conversation analytic perspective, the paper is based on video  
 
recordings of people talking and walking in a garden. Te study shows how the  
 
entire body moves in signifcant and systematic ways, within complex multi-
 
modal Gestalts. In particular it shows how walking both refexively shapes and  
 
is shaped by emergent turn formatting, ongoing sequence organization and the  
 
dynamic organization of participant frameworks.
 
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 14:08, 9 March 2016

Mondada2014h
BibType ARTICLE
Key Mondada2014h
Author(s) Lorenza Mondada
Title Multimodal analysis of walking and talking
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, body, walking, organization, talking, Gestalts, Multimodal
Publisher
Year 2014
Language
City
Month
Journal Language and Dialogue
Volume 4
Number 3
Pages 357–403
URL Link
DOI 10.1075/ld.4.3.02mon
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

Download BibTex

Abstract

Studies of gesture and language, multimodality, and embodied talk constitute a blooming domain that revisits our conceptions of language as well as of human action. However, research until now has focused on the upper part of the body — mainly on gesture, gaze, head movements and facial expressions. This paper contributes to and expands this line of research by looking at the lower part of the body — in practices of walking and talking — and by demonstrating how the entire body is crucially involved in the organisation of social interaction. Adopting a conversation analytic perspective, the paper is based on video recordings of people talking and walking in a garden. The study shows how the entire body moves in significant and systematic ways, within complex multimodal Gestalts. In particular it shows how walking both reflexively shapes and is shaped by emergent turn formatting, ongoing sequence organization and the dynamic organization of participant frameworks.

Notes