Grammer and Social Interaction in Japanese and Anglo-American English: The Display of Context, Social Identity and Social Relation

Human Studies 22 (2):363-395 (1999)
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Abstract

This paper employs conversation analysis to examine the inter-connection between grammar and displays of contextual understanding, social identity, and social relationships as well as other activities clustering around turn-endings in Japanese talk-in-interaction, while undertaking a restricted comparison with the realisation of similar activities in English. A notable feature of turn-endings in Japanese is the particular salience of grammatical construction on the interactional activities they accomplish. Complete turns which are also syntactically complete are shown to be associated with the explicit display of contextual features, whereas syntactically incomplete turns are designed to circumvent or minimise such displays. The explicit or implicit display of one's social and contextual relationship to the interactional environment is therefore seen to be an integral part of the performance of social actions in Japanese. On the other hand, in English, it is more difficult to establish a clear association between grammar and the inclusion or avoidance of contextual displays.

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The Myth of Japanese Uniqueness.Van C. Gessel & Peter N. Dale - 1988 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 108 (4):654.
The Structure of the Japanese Language.Roy Andrew Miller & Susumu Kuno - 1977 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 97 (2):232.
The Structure of the Japanese Language.Susumu Kuno - 1975 - Foundations of Language 13 (3):421-447.

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