Affiliation:
1. University of Queensland, Australia
Abstract
This article shows how the use of narrative mediates intergroup processes in spoken discourse. Sixty male and 72 female young Australian heterosexual adults participated in 4-person conversations (same-sex or mixed-sex) about HIV/AIDS and safe sex. Twvo hundred and thirty-two extracts from the transcripts that met the criteria for narratives were coded for in-group and out-group, agent and object (if any) named, extent of group homogeneity, and positivity/negativity. Major results of analyses of variance showed more positivity to in-groups than out-groups, children with AIDS, and people with medically acquired HIV; There was little difference in homogeneity amonggroups. On the other hand, qualitative analysis of several extracts indicated that negative affective reactions to the out-group and perceived out-group homogeneity were collaboratively negotiated, using narrative to assist in defining the out-group, the tone adopted by the participants to the out-group, and how participants positioned themselves relative to the issue discussed.
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,Anthropology,Language and Linguistics,Education,Social Psychology
Cited by
9 articles.
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