Liang2016
| Liang2016 | |
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| BibType | ARTICLE |
| Key | Liang2016 |
| Author(s) | Mei-Ya Liang |
| Title | Achieving Multimodal Cohesion during Intercultural
Conversations |
| Editor(s) | |
| Tag(s) | EMCA, Lingua franca, Multimodal communication, Cohesion, Participation, In Press |
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| Year | 2016 |
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| Journal | International Journal of Society, Culture & Language |
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| URL | Link |
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Abstract
How do English as a lingua franca (ELF) speakers achieve multimodal cohesion on the basis of their specific interests and cultural backgrounds? From a dialogic and collaborative view of communication, this study focuses on how verbal and nonverbal modes cohere together during intercultural conversations. The data include approximately 160-minute transcribed video recordings of ELF interactions with 4 groups of university students who engaged in the following two classroom tasks: responding to a film excerpt and a music video. The results showed that individual participants engaged in the processes of initiation and response to support or challenge one another using a range of communication strategies. The results further indicated that during the discursive activities, the small groups achieved multimodal cohesion by deploying specific embodied resources in four types of participation structure: (1) interlock, (2) unison, (3) plurality and (4) dominance. Future research may broaden our understanding of the embodied interaction that is involved in intercultural conversation.
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