11. |
- Adelsvärd, Viveka, 1942-
(författare)
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Nordenstam, Kerstin : Skvaller (1998)
- 2000
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Ingår i: Språk och stil. - 1101-1165 .- 2002-4010. ; 9, s. 195-199
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Tidskriftsartikel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
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12. |
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13. |
- Adelsvärd, Viveka, 1942-
(författare)
-
Varför ger vi röst åt de frånvarande?
- 2003
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Ingår i: Grammatik och samtal. - Uppsala : Institutionen för nordiska språk, Uppsala universitet. - 915061715X - 9789150617153 ; , s. 125-134
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Bokkapitel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
- Analys av vilka funktioner som virtuella deltagare har i samtal.
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14. |
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15. |
- Adelsvärd, Viveka, 1942-
(författare)
-
Virtual participants as communicative resources in discussions on gene technology
- 2004
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Ingår i: Dialogue Analysis VIII: Understanding and Misunderstanding in Dialogue. - Tübingen : Max Niemeyer Verlag. - 3484750278 - 9783110933239 ; , s. 275-286
-
Bokkapitel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
- The present collection of articles, presented at the 8th IADA Conference in Göteborg, focuses on understanding and misunderstanding as dialogic phenomena. The notion of a dialogic grammar and dialogic principles as a framework for understanding human communication and cognition is explored in several contributions. Misunderstanding in dialogue is dealt with in institutional and non-institutional settings, in fiction and film dialogue, from several different theoretical perspectives
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16. |
- Adelsvärd, Viveka, 1942-, et al.
(författare)
-
Who is Cindy? Aspects of identity work in a teacher-parent-pupil talk at a special school
- 2000
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Ingår i: Text - an interdisciplinary journal for the study of discourse. - 0165-4888. ; 20:4, s. 545-568
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Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
- The article presents a case study of one teacher-parent-pupil (TPP) conference. Cindy, the pupil, has Down syndrome. A study of how people with verbal communication problems manage discursive practices that largely rely on the ability to verbally negotiate identity is clearly motivated, both from a theoretical and a more practice-oriented perspective. We found that Cindy's identity is described and talked about in terms of predefined aspects, codified in a written agenda. All participants oriented themselves towards some sort of cultural model of the ideal identity that does not have to be discursively justified. Cindy's identity is not only talked about, but also demonstrated and enacted in interaction. Her self-presentation is mediated by her mother, and this mediation is linked to the sequential organization of the turn-taking system and the way the participation framework becomes organized. Cindy's talked-about and demonstrated identity work does not only concern her as an individual. It is also a relationship presentation. The identity of Cindy as a pupil and a daughter implies a certain identity for a teacher and a mother. To help one's daughter present her identity in a favorable way is to simultaneously display the identity of a good mother. ⌐ Walter de Gruyter.
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