TY - BOOK AU - Stivers,Tanya AU - Mondada,Lorenza AU - Steensig,Jakob TI - The Morality of Knowledge in Conversation T2 - Studies in Interactional Sociolinguistics SN - 9781139187503 AV - P95.45 .M65 2011 U1 - 302.346 PY - 2011/// CY - Cambridge PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Conversation analysis KW - Knowledge, Theory of KW - Social interaction KW - Analyse de la conversation KW - Théorie de la connaissance KW - Interaction sociale KW - epistemology KW - aat KW - FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS KW - Friendship KW - bisacsh KW - fast KW - Konversationsanalyse KW - gnd KW - Interaktion KW - Wissen KW - Electronic books N1 - 6 The epistemics of make-believe; Includes bibliographical references and index; Cover; The Morality of Knowledge in Conversation; Studies in Interactional Sociolinguistics; Title; Copyright; We dedicate this book to Gail Jefferson and her legacy (1938-2008); Contents; Contributors; Preface; Acknowledgements; Transcription and glossing symbols; Transcription; 1 Temporal and sequential relationships; 2 Aspects of speech delivery, including aspects of intonation; 3 Other markings; Part I Introduction; 1 Knowledge, morality and affiliation in social interaction; Introduction; Background; Knowledge in social interaction; Key notions in the study of knowledge in social interactionEpistemic access; Epistemic primacy; Epistemic responsibilities; The morality of knowledge and its implications for interactional cooperation; Cooperation in conversation: alignment and affiliation; About this volume; Conclusion; Part II Affiliational consequences of managing epistemic asymmetries; 2 The management of knowledge discrepancies and of epistemic changes in institutional interactions; Introduction; Knowledge and progressivity of talk and action: the example of itinerary descriptions; A single case: a knowledgeable speaker who does not knowThe manifestation of the problem; The conjunction of the participants: the opening of the three-way call; Resources for expressing epistemic positions: knowledge verbs; Claiming not to know and questioning the terms of the previous action (je ne sais pas); Dealing with reality disjunctures (je ne connais pas); Evolving epistemic positions; Realizing that the knowledgeable speaker possibly does not know: negative questions; Alternative sources of knowledge: turning to the computer; Call-taker announces results: je vois; Contrasting epistemic positions (je ne vois pas vs. je vois)The resolution of the case; Conclusion: reversing knowledge asymmetries; Additional transcript conventions; 3 Claiming epistemic primacy: yo-marked assessments in Japanese; Introduction; Japanese particle yo; Evaluation intensity in interaction; Yo- marked first assessments; Yo- marked second assessments; Yo- marked agreements; Yo -marked disagreements; Conclusion; 4 Morality and question design: "of course" as contesting a presupposition of askability; Introduction; Data; Analysis; Contexts of use; Orientations to unaskability; Multiple responsesDiscussion; Conclusion; 5 Addressing epistemic incongruence in question-answer sequences through the use of epistemic adverbs; Introduction; Linguistic features and data corpus; Preliminary overview of epistemic incongruence and social affiliation in question-answer sequences; Epistemics and morality in jo/ju-accounts; "As you should know" -- jo/ju-accounts that challenge the questioner's ignorance; "As we both know" -- jo/ju-accounts after first accounts; "Your fault" accounts -- treating epistemic incongruence as a moral transgression; Discussion N2 - Demonstrates how we monitor others' rights to, and responsibilities for, knowledge in conversation, and their consequences for affiliation UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=409028 ER -