Co-operative action için kapak resmi
Başlık:
Co-operative action
Yazar:
Goodwin, Charles, 1943- author
ISBN:
9781108714778
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
xxx, 521 pages ; 24 cm.
Seri:
Learning in doing.
İçerik:
Machine generated contents note: 1.1. Why Hyphenate Co-Operative? -- 1.1.1. The Conceptualization of Cooperation in Animal Experiments --1.2. Phenomena Implicated in Co-Operative Action -- 1.2.1. Language -- 1.2.2. Human Sociality -- 1.2.3. Creating Skilled, Competent Members -- 1.3. Brief Overview -- 1.3.1. Part I Co-Operative Accumulative Action -- 1.3.2. Part II Intertwined Semiosis -- 1.3.3. Part III Embodied Interaction -- 1.3.4. Part IV Co-Operative Action with Predecessors: Sedimented Landscapes for Knowledge and Action -- 1.3.5. Part V Professional Vision, Transforming Sensory Experience into Types, and the Creation of Competent Inhabitants -- 1.4. Transcription and Presentation of Data -- 1.5. Summary -- 2. Co-Operative Accumulation as a Pervasive Feature of the Organization of Action --2.1. Building New Action by Reusing with Transformation Materials Provided by Others -- 2.1.1.A Historical Digression -- 2.2. The Co-Operative Construction of Subsequent Action. Note continued: 2.2.1. Co-Operation(s) -- 2.2.2. Accumulation -- 2.2.3. Substrates -- 2.3. Varied Practices for Co-Operative Accumulation -- 2.3.1. Symbolic Language Embedded within Indexical and Iconic Forms of Semiosis -- 2.4. Summary -- 2.4.1. Building Action Co-Operatively on Substrates That Accumulate Resources -- 2.4.1.1. Accumulation -- 2.4.1.2. Substrates -- 2.5. The Combinatorial Organization of Language and Action as Visible Public Practice -- 2.6. The Dialogic Syntax of John Du Bois -- 2.7. The Extraordinarily Rich Language of Poor African-American Children -- 3. The Co-Operative Organization of Emerging Action -- 3.1. The Emergence of Objects within Lived Time -- 3.2. Multiparty Co-Operative Accumulation within Noun Phrases -- 3.3.Competing Tellings -- 3.4. Inhabiting a Different World -- 4. Chil and His Resources -- 4.1. Chil's Resources -- 4.1.1. Chil's Life after His Stroke and How I Recorded His Interaction. Note continued: 5. Building Complex Meaning and Action with a Three-Word Vocabulary: Inhabiting and Reshaping the Actions of Others through Accumulative Transformation -- 5.1. Incorporating Rich Language Structure Produced by Others -- 5.2. Incorporating Talk Produced by Others While Transforming It -- 5.2.1. Indexical Incorporation -- 5.2.2. Symbols -- 5.2.3. Chains of Interpretants -- 5.3. Two Practices for Reusing, with Transformation, Materials Created Earlier by Others -- 6. The Distributed Speaker -- 6.1. The Distributed Organization of Both Speakers and Their Utterances -- 6.2. An Example of Cooperation -- 6.3. Symbols That Lack Necessary Indexical Grounding -- 6.4. Ideal, Self-Contained Fully Competent Actors, or Distributed Interactive Fields Encompassing Participants with Different Abilities? -- 7. Intertwined Knowing -- 7.1. Differential Knowledge States as a Constitutive Feature of Human Action -- 7.1.1. Actively Sustaining a Complementary Distribution of Knowledge. Note continued: 7.2. Multiple Transformations within a Single Sentence -- 7.3. Conclusion -- 7.3.1. The Ongoing Organization of Awareness That Others Have Knowledge That Differs from Our Own through Co-Operative Action -- 7.3.2. The Interpreting Self as Unfolding Co-Operative Practice -- 7.3.3. The Shaping of Utterances, Actions, and Sentences within Interaction -- 7.3.4. Simultaneous Co-Operative Action -- 8. Building Action by Combining Different Kinds of Materials -- 8.1. Building Action by Joining Together Different Kinds of Resources -- 8.2. The Laminated Organization of Spoken Action -- 8.2.1. Inflecting Stance -- 8.3. Using Prosody to Build Varied Action with a Limited Lexicon -- 8.3.1. Saying Something Different by Building a New Contextual Configuration -- 8.4. Building Action through Use of Varied, Distributed Resources -- 8.5. Chil's Timing -- 8.5.1. Exploiting Rhythm and Timing in American Football -- 8.6. Conclusion -- 9. Intertwined Actors. Note continued: 9.1. The Laminated Organization of Human Action -- 9.1.1. Delaminating Talk and Action Provided b Others -- 9.2. Laminated Co-Operative Action That Spans Centuries -- 9.3. Visible Co-Operations on Another's Emerging Talk -- 9.3.1.A Silent, though Visible Principal Character -- 9.3.2. Building Action by Performing Structure Preserving Visible Transformations on a Public Substrate -- 9.4. The Visible Cognitive Life of the Hearer -- 9.5. Temporally Unfolding Participation Central to the Organization of Human Action -- 9.6. Human Tools -- 9.7. The Combinatorial Organization of Human Tools as a Matrix for the Constitution of Human Social and Economic Organization -- 9.8. Conclusion -- 10. Projection and the Interactive Organization of Unfolding Experience -- 10.1. Assessments -- 10.1.1. Embodied Responses by Recipients to Assessments -- 10.2. Assessment Adjectives as Guides for Hearers -- 10.3. Monitoring the Experiential Displays of Others. Note continued: 10.3.1. Bringing Assessment Activity to a Close -- 10.4. Conclusion -- 11. Projecting Upcoming Events to Accomplish Co-Operative Action -- 11.1. Movement to a Different Kind of Activity -- 11.2. Projecting the Loci for Collaborative Activity in Talk -- 11.2.1. Extended Overlap -- 11.2.2. Differential Access as an Organizing Feature of Concurrent Assessments -- 11.2.3. Making Visible Congruent Understanding -- 11.2.4. Erroneous Projection -- 11.2.5. Simultaneous Vocal and Nonvocal Heightened Involvement -- 11.2.6. Exiting from the Collaborative Assessment -- 11.2.7. Laminating Inconsistent Displays to Create Delicate Withdrawals -- 12. Action and Co-Operative Embodiment in Girl's Hopscotch -- 12.1. Semiotic Structure in the Environment -- 12.2. Talk-in-Interaction -- 12.3. Changing Contextual Configurations -- 12.4. Conclusion -- 13. Practices of Color Classification -- 13.1. Mapping a Feature -- 13.2. Semiotic Structure in the Environment. Note continued: 13.3. The Munsell Chart as a Historically Shaped Field for the Production of Action -- 13.4. Heterotopias -- 13.5. Building Action within Talk-in-Interaction with the Munsell Chart -- 13.6. The Intersubjective Constitution of the Objects That Animate the Work of a Community -- 13.6.1. The Intelligible Body: Embodied Stance and the Constitution of Action -- 13.7. Using Graphic Fields to Build Action -- 14. Highlighting and Mapping the World as Co-Operative Practice -- 14.1. Highlighting -- 14.2. Graphic Representations as Embodied Practice -- 14.3. Co-Operative Action as a Framework for Making Public Another's Understanding -- 14.4. Calibrating Professional Vision through Embodied Co-Operative Action within a Relevant Environment -- 15. Environmentally Coupled Gestures -- 15.1. Juxtaposing Multiple Semiotic Fields to Accomplish Pointing -- 15.2. Gestures Tied to the Environment -- 15.3. The Communicative Status of Environmentally Coupled Gestures. Note continued: 15.3.1. Embedding Gesture within Participation Frameworks -- 15.3.2. Multiple Forms of Embodied Semiosis Operate Simultaneously -- 15.4. The Accumulative Power of the Laminated Structure of Human Action --15.5. Conclusion -- 16. Co-Operative Action with Predecessors -- 16.1. The Consequential Presence of Absent Predecessors within Local Face-to-Face Interaction -- 16.1.1. The Special Character of Copresence -- 16.2. My Use of the Term "Predecessor" -- 16.3. Co-Operative Action with Absent Predecessors -- 16.3.1. Substrate Created Co-Operatively by Actors Distributed in Space and by Task -- 16.3.2. Transforming a Scene into Action-Relevant Objects -- 16.4.Organizing the Work-Relevant Perception of the Environment -- 16.5. Co-Operative Accumulation Both with Those Who Are Present, and with the Materials Provided by Predecessors -- 16.6. The Schedule as a Cultural Umwelt -- 16.7. The Schedule Organizing Work-Relevant Perception within an Umwelt.
Özet:
"Co-Operative Action proposes a new framework for the study of how human beings create action and shared knowledge in concert with others by re-using transformation resources inherited from earlier actors: we inhabit each other's actions. Goodwin uses videotape to examine in detail the speech and embodied actions of children arguing and playing hopscotch, interactions in the home of a man with severe aphasia, the fieldwork of archaeologists and geologists, chemists and oceanographers, and legal argument in the Rodney King trial. Through ethnographically rich, rigorous qualitative analysis of human action, sociality and meaning-making that incorporates the interdependent use of language, the body, and historically shaped settings, the analysis cuts across the boundaries of traditional disciplines. It investigates language-in-interaction, human tools and their use, the progressive accumulation of human cultural, linguistic and social diversity, and multimodality as different outcomes of common shared practices for building human action in concert with others." --Publisher's description.
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