Saying and Doing in Zapotec: Multimodality, Resonance, and the Language of Joint Actions: Bloomsbury Studies in Linguistic Anthropology
Autor Dr Mark A. Sicolien Limba Engleză Hardback – 16 sep 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350142169
ISBN-10: 1350142166
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Bloomsbury Studies in Linguistic Anthropology
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350142166
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Bloomsbury Studies in Linguistic Anthropology
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Presents a multimodal ethnography of language in social life with theoretical consequences for the analysis of linguistic, and cultural, reproduction and change
Notă biografică
Mark A. Sicoli is Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Linguistics at the University of Virginia, USA.
Cuprins
PrefaceOrthography and Abbreviations1. Introduction2. Offer3. Recruit4. Repair5. Resonate6. Build 7. Living AssemblagesBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
[Saying and Doing in Zapotec] ought to be read widely by anthropologists and linguists: both readerships will find important insights ... This book will inspire new generations of linguists to take a thoroughly multimodal perspective on language, and it will push future ethnographers to consider whether their work might be enhanced by adopting video-based methodologies.
Sicoli's holistic and participant-centered Zapotec ethnography not only provides important analytic and theoretical insights into the multimodal complexity of human sociality, but also constitutes a vital resource for language documentation and, hopefully, revitalization.
Saying and Doing in Zapotec: Multimodality, Resonance, and the Language of Joint Actions, brings [conversation analysis] ideas into dialogue with current anthropological theory. While each volume has a unique perspective, all three include ethnographic information about the society in question and about the languages spoken there, and do not simply look at conversational sequences alone. In this sense they are following Moerman's (1988, 1996) model for ethnographic [conversation analysis], and the monograph format allows for more extended rich descriptions of interaction illustrated by many more conversational excerpts than are possible to include in an article format.
This sparkling book sets new standards in the analysis of human sociality as enacted in and through language and culture. Mark Sicoli's ethnographically rich analysis of joint action in Lachixío Zapotec social life gives us access to both the realization of universal human imperatives of sociality and the cultural elaboration of local values through linguistic and interpersonal practice. A must-read for field-working linguists, sociolinguists, and anthropologists.
In the spirit of the best linguistic anthropology, Sicoli's careful attention to the intricacies of everyday interaction in a highland Zapotec community is a means of getting at matters of far-reaching importance-namely, to show how speech and bodily motion interweave to produce coordinated human action, and ultimately to build the social and physical worlds we inhabit.
This book is a tour de force. Through video-recorded examples from a Zapotec community, Sicoli shows beautifully how joint social action emerges in face-to-face interaction. Linguistic forms, gestures, positionings, and objects come together in multimodal assemblages that build on one another. Clearly, ethnographic studies of language in conversational interaction are enriched by his multimodal approach.
Sicoli's holistic and participant-centered Zapotec ethnography not only provides important analytic and theoretical insights into the multimodal complexity of human sociality, but also constitutes a vital resource for language documentation and, hopefully, revitalization.
Saying and Doing in Zapotec: Multimodality, Resonance, and the Language of Joint Actions, brings [conversation analysis] ideas into dialogue with current anthropological theory. While each volume has a unique perspective, all three include ethnographic information about the society in question and about the languages spoken there, and do not simply look at conversational sequences alone. In this sense they are following Moerman's (1988, 1996) model for ethnographic [conversation analysis], and the monograph format allows for more extended rich descriptions of interaction illustrated by many more conversational excerpts than are possible to include in an article format.
This sparkling book sets new standards in the analysis of human sociality as enacted in and through language and culture. Mark Sicoli's ethnographically rich analysis of joint action in Lachixío Zapotec social life gives us access to both the realization of universal human imperatives of sociality and the cultural elaboration of local values through linguistic and interpersonal practice. A must-read for field-working linguists, sociolinguists, and anthropologists.
In the spirit of the best linguistic anthropology, Sicoli's careful attention to the intricacies of everyday interaction in a highland Zapotec community is a means of getting at matters of far-reaching importance-namely, to show how speech and bodily motion interweave to produce coordinated human action, and ultimately to build the social and physical worlds we inhabit.
This book is a tour de force. Through video-recorded examples from a Zapotec community, Sicoli shows beautifully how joint social action emerges in face-to-face interaction. Linguistic forms, gestures, positionings, and objects come together in multimodal assemblages that build on one another. Clearly, ethnographic studies of language in conversational interaction are enriched by his multimodal approach.