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Investigating casual conversation: a systemic functional linguistic and social network model of analysing social reality / Systemic functional linguistic and social network model of analysing social realityMcAndrew, Paula January 2002 (has links)
"November 2001". / Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Linguistics and Psychology, Dept. of Linguistics, 2002. / Bibliography: p. 285-291. / Introduction -- Language from a systemic functional perspective -- Social networks: a review of literature relevant to the Scotland Island study -- Methodology -- Analysing relational ties: a social network perspective -- A systemic functional approach to analysing social reality -- Discussion and conclusion. / This research is concerned with the study of language and the social order. Working within the systemic functional theory of language, and utilising the concept of a social network to model the social order, the primary aim is to put on display the relationship between the linguistic system and social order, between language and culture. Systemic functional grammar (Halliday, 1995; Halliday and Hasasn, 1985/9; Halliday and Matthiesen, 1997; Eggins and Slade 1997), with its emphasis on language as a social semiotic, is used to analyse the language used by a group of four women engaged in casual conversation in a small Australian island community. Here the analysis reveals how the women negotiate their social reality when speaking to each other. It shows how their social relations are shaped within a text (Hasan, 1996), and explores the notion that, despite the seemingly trivial, unconscious nature of casual interactions, power and solidarity are continually being negotiated by the participants (Halliday, 1994; Eggins and Slade, 1997). More specifically, this research examines the notion that through lexico-grammatical and semantic selections participants are able to negotiate dominant positions in interaction. Social Network analysis has been used to examine the relationship between the individual and the group. It offers a quantifiable analytical tool for describing the character of an individual's everyday social relationships (Milroy, 1987). A social network analysis is used in the present study to map the social relationships in the tight-knit network, or speech fellowship, of these women (creating a map of the context of situation in SFL terminology). Change in the social relationships and language choices is modeled by revisiting the participants 15 months later in a contextually similar environment and re-analysing the network and linguistic options. Systemic functional linguistics is then used to highlight the interdependency of language and social order. Through systematic accounts of language and the context in which it is embedded this reciprocal nature is displayed and language and social order can be seen, not as two distinct entities, but rather as one phenomena seen from two different perspectives (Halliday, 1978; Mathiessen, 1993). / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / v, 291 p. ill
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Social meanings in talk : an ethnographic analysis of the German pronouns Du and Sie /Winchatz, Michaela R. January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1997. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [199]-206).
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Conversation analysis a study of institutional interaction and gender in a Russian classroom /Greene, Carole Teresa. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D)--University of Alberta, 2009. / "A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Slavic Linguistics, Modern Languages and Cultural Studies." Title from pdf file main screen (viewed on July 14, 2009). Includes bibliographical references.
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Negative yes/no question-answer sequences in conversation grammar, action, and sequence organization /Park, Ji Seon, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--UCLA, 2008. / Vita. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 470-482).
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Analyzing medical discourse the organization of doctor-patient interaction in Korean primary care settings /Park, Yujong, January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--UCLA, 2009. / Vita. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 321-350).
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Using concurrent operants to evaluate perseverative conversation in children and adolescents diagnosed with Asperger's disorderO'Brien, Matthew J. Wacker, David P., Ehly, Stewart W., January 2009 (has links)
Thesis advisor: David P. Wacker, Stewart W. Ehly. Includes bibliographic references (p. 164-183).
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Beginning difficult conversations an analysis of opening statements in Victim Offender Mediation/Dialogue /Szmania, Susan J. Maxwell, Madeline M. January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2004. / Supervisor: Madeline Maxwell. Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Isenzo sentetho yokukhalaza kwimeko yekhayaMbambo, Asandiswa Nondwe 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study aims at exploring speech acts. Actions via utterances are generally called
speech acts. They are commonly given specific labels such as apology, compliment,
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request, promise or warning etc. The usefulness of speech acts illustrates kinds of things
we can do with words and identifying some of the conventional utterance forms we use to
perform specific actions.
This study examines speech act of complaints in a domestic context. According to
Trosborg (1995) there are two different types of complaints. The direct complaint is when
complainer diretly accuse the complainee of having committed the offence. The indirect
complaint is when the complainer ask the hearer a question about the situation that she/he
is in someway connected with the offence.
This study illustrates how Xhosa people complain in a domestic context. Quationaires
were distributed to the people of Kayamandi Township in Stellenbosch, Emgwali Location
in Stutterheim and Kwalini Location in King William's Town. The focus was on Mothers and
Fathers, Daughters and Sons, Brothers and Sisters. The family members complain to each
other on different levels and according to their status.
Trosborg (1995) has identified eight complaint strategies. The hint, annoyance, ill
consequences, direct accusation, indirect accusation, modified blame, explicit
condemnation of the accused's action and explicit condemnation of the accused as a
person. The mother complains to the daughter more than when she is complaining to the
son and the father. The father complains to the son more than when he complains to the
daughter. The son and the daughter complain almost equaly to their parents. The daughter
complains equaly as her sister. These members have some ways of responding to the
complaints.
Boxer (1991) has identified six types of responses to the indirect complaints. The question,
the joke, contradiction, commisseration, lecture and advice. The father has used more
strategies when responding to the mother. The mother has responded to the daughter
more than when responding to the father and the son. the son and the daughter has
responded almost equaly to their parents. The brother and the sister responded equaly to
their parents. The examination of speech acts will help us understand how actions are carried out and
interpreted wthin speech events and how more get communicated than is said. It has been
established that speech acts of complaint in Xhosa playa crucial sociocultural role in our
communities. This is being proved by the manner in which females and male have used
the strategies in this data. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie het as doelstelling die ondersoek van spraakhandelinge in Xhosa.
Handelinge wat uitgevoer word via uitings word spraakhandelinge genoem. Hierdie
spraakhandelinge word oor die algemeen bepaalde benaminge gegee, soos verskoning,
komplimentering, versoek, belofte, waarskuwing, ens. Die gebruik van spraakhandelinge
illustreer die soort dinge wat mense met woorde kan doen, en identifiseer sommige van
die konvensionele uiting vorme wat mense gebruik om spesifieke spraakhandelinge uit te
voer.
Hierdie studie ondersoek die spraakhandeling van klagte in huishoudelike konteks.
Volgens Trosborg (1995) is daar twee verskillende tipes klagtes. Die direkte klagte behels
dat die klaer die klagte-hoorder direk beskuldig van 'n oortreding. Die indirekte klagte
behels dat die klaer _'n vraag vra aan die klagte-hoorder oor die situasie waarmee
laasgenoemde op 'n manier verbind is met die oortreding.
Hierdie studie ondersoek hoe Xhosa-sprekende persone kla in huishoudelike konteks.
Vraelyste is gegee aan inwoners van die Kayamandi wooongebied in Stellenbosch,
Emgwali woongebied in Stutterheim en Kwalini woongebied in King William's Town. Die
fokus was op vaders en moeders, dogters en seuns, en broers en susters. Die familielede
kla teenoor mekaar op verskillende vlakke en dienooreenkomstig hulle status.
Trosborg (1995) identifiseer agt klagte strategieë, naamlik die skimp, verviesing, slegte
gevolge, direkte beskuldiging, indirekte beskuldiging, gewysigde blaam, eksplisiete
veroordeling van die beskuldigde se aksies, en die eksplisiete beoordeling van die
beskuldigde as persoon. Die moeder kla meer teenoor die dogter as wat sy kla teenoor die
vader of die seun. Die vader kla meer teenoor die seun as teenoor die dogter. Die seun en
dogter kla ongeveer in 'n gelyke mate teenoor hulle ouers. Die dogter kla eweveel as haar
suster.
Boxer (1991) identifiseer ses tipes response op indirekte klagtes, naamlik die vraag, die
grap, die weerspreking, die lesing, en advies. Die vader het meer strategieë gebruik in
response teenoor die moeder. Die moeder het meer response gehad teenoor die dogter
as wat sy gehad het teenoor die vader en die seun. Die seun en dogter het ongeveer in 'n gelyke mate response teenoor hulle ouers gehad. Die broer en suster het ongeveer
dieselfde mate van response teenoor mekaar gehad.
Die ondersoek na spraakhandelinge lewer 'n bydrae daartoe om te verstaan hoe
handelinge uitgevoer word en geïnterpreteer word binne spraakhandelinge, en hoe meer
gekommunikeer word as wat gesê word. Daar is vasgestel dat spraakhandelinge van
klagte in Xhosa 'n wesenlike sosio-kulturele rol speel in gemeenskappe. Hierdie feit word
bevestig deur onder andere die wyse waarop mans en vroue die strategieë gebruik het in
hierdie studie
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Empathy in doctor-patient palliative care consultations : a conversation-analytic approachFord, Joseph January 2017 (has links)
This thesis analyses doctors empathising with patients in palliative care interactions. Historically, palliative care has treated not only patients physical pain but their emotional pain, as well. Although the importance of empathy (defined for the purposes of this thesis as The doctor s expressed understanding of the patient s emotional experience ) has been emphasised in this environment, however, there has been no prior research showing how palliative care doctors actually empathise with their patients in practice. Drawing upon 37 recordings of doctor-patient consultations collected in a UK hospice, this thesis addresses this omission by using conversation analysis (CA) to analyse several facets of empathy in this environment. The analysis begins in chapter four by considering the ways in which doctors can empathise with patients. It shows how doctors can empathise semantically, either by reworking what the patient has themselves said or by showing understanding on a normative basis. It also considers non-semantic ways of displaying empathy (e.g. response cries), showing how these are fundamentally different to the semantic type of empathic display. Overall, this chapter shows that empathy is not restricted to particular formats but, rather, is dependent upon the content of the doctor s turn. The analysis then moves on consider the wider context of doctors empathic responses. Chapter five, first of all, analyses cases where patients emotions become the topic of the interaction, either because the doctor asks about them directly or because the patient raises an emotionally-implicative topic. The emphasis here is on how palliative care doctors can talk to patients about, and empathise with, their emotions without necessarily having to do anything about those emotions. Chapter six then focuses on cases where patients emotions are discussed alongside the more task-driven aspects of the consultation, either because the patient s physical condition has had an emotional impact on them or because their presenting problem is inherently emotional. In contrast to chapter five, then, the source of the patient s emotions here can be treated by the doctor without the emotions being topicalised. The final two chapters of the analysis focus on doctors empathising with patients not in response to something that the patient has said but in the service of some task. Chapter seven shows how doctors can empathically bridge the gap between their medical and the patient s experiential perspectives at moments where it becomes clear that there is a disparity between the two. These include moments where the patient expresses expectations that go beyond what can realistically be provided, moments where the patient might take offence at the doctor s advice and moments where the doctor must reassure patients about their symptoms without seeming to criticise their emotional responses to those symptoms. Chapter eight, meanwhile, shows how doctors can empathically demonstrate that their practice is being driven by a due consideration of the patient s feelings. Specifically, it shows how doctors can draw upon patients feelings in helping them come to a decision about a treatment, cite those feelings when accounting for a treatment that they have recommended and frame a difficult topic as an outgrowth of sentiments that the patient has already expressed. In conclusion, this thesis shows how empathy is not clearly demarcated in palliative care. While there are cases where patients emotions are discussed and empathised with for the sake of discussing and empathising with them, more commonly, empathy and emotion are interwoven alongside and into the task-driven aspects of consultations. This thesis thus shows the interactional manifestation of palliative care s underlying philosophy, with patients emotional pain addressed alongside their physical pain in an integrated, holistic way.
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Challenging and delicate communication in the Gender Identity ClinicMcPhillips, Rebecca January 2014 (has links)
Working at the intersection of medical sociology and the psychology of health, language and communication, in this PhD I use thematic analysis (TA) and conversation analysis (CA) to provide an insight into various aspects of doctor-patient communication that may be considered, or are constructed as, challenging and/or delicate for either the patient, doctor or both at a Gender Identity Clinic (GIC) in the UK. This project involves the secondary analysis of two existing data-sets: (i) 21 recorded telephone interviews between my PhD supervisor and transsexual patients who attended the GIC; (ii) 156 transcribed audio-recordings and 38 video-recordings (total = 194) of psychiatrist-patient consultations in the GIC. The first original research paper uses TA to investigate the views and experiences of transsexual patients regarding their communication with psychiatrists at the GIC. An important finding was that patients actually appreciated being challenged in this setting, subsequently the implications of this are considered with regards to the achievability and desirability of patient centred communication. The second research paper uses CA to consider how patients overtly challenge psychiatrists in the GIC in ways that have not been shown in conversation analytic research on medical interactions to date. Analysis of the data corpus revealed that there were three common ways in which patients challenged psychiatrists at the GIC, which are (1) by problematising their questions; (2) by disagreeing with statements that are made regarding their treatment; (3) and by initiating complaints. The findings of this study are considered in relation to the implications that they have for clinicians and for the persistence and desirability of asymmetry in clinical interaction in light of the current debates surrounding the concept of patient-centeredness. The final research paper also uses CA, in this instance to study how the topic of weight, which is often constructed and orientated towards as delicate in talk-in-interaction, is occasioned and discussed by psychiatrists and patients at the GIC. Whereas previous CA research on this topic has focused on how this is constructed by speakers as a moral issue, this paper is concerned with focusing on how psychiatrists (1) establish with patients that their weight is an issue, (2) encourage patients to lose weight by informing them that this is their responsibility and (3) offer advice on the behavior changes associated with weight loss. The results of this paper are discussed with regards to the implications that they have for clinicians who discuss the potentially delicate topic of weight with patients in a number of different settings. This project contributes towards the growing debates regarding the achievability and desirability of patient centred communication and the persistence of asymmetry in clinical interaction. It also contributes to medical conversation analytic literature to date on asymmetry and talk about weight in clinical interactions.
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