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oapen-20.500.12657-862472023-12-20T02:40:41Z Chapter 8 Embodied scepticism Clift, Rebecca co-presence; co-present bodies within space; social interaction; interactional sociolinguistics; interactional foundations of the self; participation; Erving Goffman; Lorenza Mondada; conversation analysis; sociolinguistics; interactional linguistics; language sciences; ethnomethodology; Anssi Peräkylä; self and identity; interaction studies; language and interaction; language and social interaction bic Book Industry Communication::C Language::CB Language: reference & general bic Book Industry Communication::C Language::CF linguistics This chapter extends some of the observations that Goffman made on a class of vocalisations he called ‘response cries’ (1978) to the domain of the multi-modal by examining an embodied practice in English interaction: a particular facial expression that 1) has particular compositional features and 2) occurs in a particular sequential position. Compositionally, this expression consists of raised eyebrows and pursed lips; sequentially, it is produced in response to a claim made by a co-participant. Instances from both institutional and mundane interaction are examined here. These show participants may or may not be gazing at their co-participant; the expression is not necessarily designed to get uptake. In this respect, this facial expression resembles Goffman’s ‘response cries’ in being produced in the presence of others, but not necessarily designed to get responses from those others. Response relevance is seen to be shaped as much by sequential position as features of composition. This facial expression is shown, when analysed in its sequential environment, to constitute an embodied display of scepticism. 2023-12-19T11:30:47Z 2023-12-19T11:30:47Z 2024 chapter 9780367555771 9781032552194 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/86247 eng application/pdf Attribution 4.0 International 9781003094111_10.4324_9781003094111-10.pdf Taylor & Francis New Perspectives on Goffman in Language and Interaction Routledge 10.4324/9781003094111-10 10.4324/9781003094111-10 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb 75707a4e-dae0-4329-a9f1-43f744b460a9 ca077e3f-1580-4778-b4ea-a7b92f991f35 9780367555771 9781032552194 Routledge 26 University of Essex open access
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This chapter extends some of the observations that Goffman made on a class of vocalisations he called ‘response cries’ (1978) to the domain of the multi-modal by examining an embodied practice in English interaction: a particular facial expression that 1) has particular compositional features and 2) occurs in a particular sequential position. Compositionally, this expression consists of raised eyebrows and pursed lips; sequentially, it is produced in response to a claim made by a co-participant. Instances from both institutional and mundane interaction are examined here. These show participants may or may not be gazing at their co-participant; the expression is not necessarily designed to get uptake. In this respect, this facial expression resembles Goffman’s ‘response cries’ in being produced in the presence of others, but not necessarily designed to get responses from those others. Response relevance is seen to be shaped as much by sequential position as features of composition. This facial expression is shown, when analysed in its sequential environment, to constitute an embodied display of scepticism.
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9781003094111_10.4324_9781003094111-10.pdf
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9781003094111_10.4324_9781003094111-10.pdf
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9781003094111_10.4324_9781003094111-10.pdf
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9781003094111_10.4324_9781003094111-10.pdf
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9781003094111_10.4324_9781003094111-10.pdf
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9781003094111_10.4324_9781003094111-10.pdf
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9781003094111_10.4324_9781003094111-10.pdf
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Taylor & Francis
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2023
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1799945270283206656
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