Abstract

This article introduces the special issue of Research on Language and Social Interaction organized around the theme “Opening and Maintaining Face-to-Face Interaction.” The contributions to this special issue collectively consider “how to begin”—either a new encounter or a new sequence after a lapse in conversation. All articles analyze naturally occurring, video-recorded episodes of casual and/or institutional copresent interaction using multimodal conversation analytic methods. Though the opening phase of a face-to-face encounter may elapse in a matter of seconds, this article shows it to house a dense universe of phenomena central to sustaining our human sense of self and our social relationships in everyday life. Before introducing the individual contributions to this special issue, this article elucidates state-of-the-art findings from conversation analytic research on how people begin encounters, delineating the modular components that people regularly use to constitute the copresent opening phase of interaction. Data in American English.

Department

Communication

Publication Date

9-10-2018

Journal Title

Research on Language and Social Interaction

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

https://doi.org/10.1080/08351813.2018.1485224

Document Type

Article

Comments

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Research on Language and Social Interaction in 2018, available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/08351813.2018.1485224

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