Browse by author
Lookup NU author(s): Dr Spencer Hazel
Full text for this publication is not currently held within this repository. Alternative links are provided below where available.
This talk presents one account for the reasons behind how we represent and theorise face to face interaction. I consider one methodological path that has steered social interaction researchers to build accounts for interactional organisation, in the formats that are now considered the default mode for representing interaction. I consider how in pursuing this path, we may have ended up in a methodological blind alley, and at risk of rendering the object of our investigation invisible. Usinginteractional data from a range of settings, I argue that in attempting to analyse interactional phenomena that do not lend themselves easily to our typical methodological procedures, we may yet be able to get beyond the constraints imposed on usby our training
Author(s): Hazel S
Publication type: Conference Proceedings (inc. Abstract)
Publication status: Published
Conference Name: Helsinki Lectures on Intersubjectivity
Year of Conference: 2017
Online publication date: 03/11/2017
Acceptance date: 21/07/2017
Publisher: Finnish Centre of Excellence in Intersubjectivity in Interaction
URL: https://blogs.helsinki.fi/intersubjectivity/hellointersubjectivity/?lang=en