Abstract
This article provides an empirically grounded account
of what happens when more persons than one talk at once
in conversation. It undertakes to specify when such occurrences
are problematic for the participants, and for the organization
of interaction; what the features of such overlapping talk
are; and what constraints an account of overlapping talk
should meet. It describes the practices employed by participants
to deal with such simultaneous talk, and how they form
an organization of practices which is related to the turn-taking
organization previously described by Sacks et al. 1974.
This “overlap resolution device” constitutes
a previously unexplicated component of that turn-taking
organization, and one that provides solutions to underspecified
features of the previous account.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
633 articles.
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