scholarly journals Recipiency and peripheral participation in language brokering

Calidoscópio ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 152-173
Author(s):  
Katariina Harjunpää

In a multilingual situation where some participants do not speak or understand one of the used languages, the participants need to balance between the language choice and the restrictions it creates for opportunities to participate. In this conversation analytic study, I examine how participants manage differentiated possibilities of participation in asymmetrically multilingual interactions in instances of language brokering and to what extent does brokering draw the recipient into the conversation. The paper concludes, first, that participants’ embodied displays of recipiency toward a main speaker, whose talk they cannot (fully) understand, as well as embodied displays of disengagement from the conversation, can serve to “recruit” linguistic assistance from others. Second, the broker’s orientations to the recipient’s participation status are reflected in the content of the brokering turns. The study thereby demonstrates how participants multimodally negotiate forms of peripheral participation and their accountability. The study argues that, although language brokering is done only occasionally and includes great variation in terms of how prior talk is translated, these practices are not random but result from a systematic interactional organization of action and participation.

2009 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 339-363 ◽  
Author(s):  
KATHRYN M. HOWARD

ABSTRACTChildren’s humorous play is a cultural activity with its own particular aesthetic – an aesthetic in which highly creative, incongruent, and unexpected speech and action are valorized, appreciated, and rewarded. Drawing on Bauman’s concept of calibration, the adjustments by which speakers align their intertextual utterances to new contexts and purposes, this paper argues that an aesthetic of decalibration is at work in children’s metalinguistic and metapragmatic language play. Children capitalize upon linguistic and pragmatic ambiguity to breach expectations, drawing on complex linguistic, contextual and pragmatic knowledge to create maximally humorous language play performances. Through close analysis of videotaped interactions from a larger ethnographic, discourse analytic study of northern Thai children’s everyday lives, this article examines how younger children are socialized into these practices of language play through peripheral participation in multi-age play groups, showing that the repetitive poetic structure and predictability of the play genres constitute jumping-off and breaking-in points for language play. (Calibration, repetition, children’s language, play, language socialization, Thai, humor)1


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tyler Hunt ◽  
David Shwalb ◽  
Cameron Brown ◽  
Alayna Purdy ◽  
Jenna Flynn ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine M. Smith ◽  
Kate Bell ◽  
Kevin Bettes ◽  
Emily Bushouse ◽  
Karlie Singleton
Keyword(s):  

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