Beställningsvara. Skickas inom 5-8 vardagar. Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.
The importance of emotion in everyday interactions has become a central topic of research in a wide variety of disciplines, including linguistics, sociology, social psychology, anthropology, and communication. Emotion in Interaction offers a collection of original studies that explore emotion in naturally occurring spoken interaction. The articles examine both the verbal and non-verbal resources for expressing emotional stance (lexicon, syntax, prosody, laughter, crying, facial expression), the emotional aspects of action sequences (e.g. news delivery and conflicts), and the role of emotions in institutional interaction (medical consultations, psychotherapy, health visiting and helpline calls). What unites the articles is an understanding of the expression of emotion and the construction of emotional stances as a process that both shapes and is shaped by the interactional context.
Anssi Peräkylä is a Professor of Sociology at the University of Helsinki.Marja-Leena Sorjonen is Professor of Finnish Language at the University of Helsinki.
1. Introduction ; Marja-Leena Sorjonen and Anssi Perakyla ; 2. Emotion as stance ; Marjorie Harness Goodwin, Asta Cekaite, Charles Goodwin and Eve Tulbert ; 3. Distress in adult-child interaction ; Anthony J. Wootton ; 4. Facial expression and interactional regulation of emotion ; Anssi Perakyla and Johanna Ruusuvuori ; 5. Good news, bad news, and affect: practical and temporal "emotion work" in everyday life ; Douglas W. Maynard and Jeremy Freese ; 6. Exploring affiliation in the reception of conversational complaint stories ; Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen ; 7. Being equivocal: affective responses left unspecified ; Auli Hakulinen and Marja-Leena Sorjonen ; 8. Laughter in conversation: the case of "fake" laughter ; Markku Haakana ; 9. Crying and crying responses ; Alexa Hepburn and Jonathan Potter ; 10. Revealing surprise: the local ecology and the transposition of action ; Christian Heath, Dirk vom Lehn, Jason Cleverly and Paul Luff ; 11. Responding to emotion in cognitive psychotherapy ; Liisa Voutilainen ; 12. Knowledge, empathy and emotion in a medical encounter ; John Heritage and Anna Lindstrom ; 13. Epilogue ; Anssi Perakyla ; Appendix. Transcription and glossing conventions. ; References
The book invites the reader to further explore how we display and react to emotions. It is a major contribution to the field, allowing for many new insights.