‘Conversational Analysis’? How Might It Illuminate Issues Concerning Social Interactions Essay, Research Paper
This essay will examine the notion of ‘Conversational analysis’ and its contributions to explaining the dynamics of social interaction, then cite possible pathways for discourse in the future. Conversation is the main means by which humans communicate, and is thus vital for full and rich social interaction. An obvious definition of conversation is a process of talking where at least two participants freely alternate in speaking. Certain methods of communication would not fall into this, though – such as a prisoner being questioned by a barrister in a law court, or a tutor lecturing to his eager Cognitive Science students. However, the analysis of conversation is not a simple matter. One of the most fascinating things about it is that it occurs naturally – so to study it in the artificial conditions of a psychologist’s laboratory may repress its spontaneity and devalue the results. Conversational analysis has thus been taken up by pioneering sociologists known as ethnomethodologists. Ethnomethodology was a sociological and pragmatic backlash to the quantitative methods surrounding the area which were seen to yeild somewhat less than objective results. The ethnomethodological stance, then, is to look, in a qualitative manner, at the dynamics of conversation used by agents as they interact with their social environment. A main feature of conversations is that they tend to follow the convention of turn taking. Simply, this is where one person waits for the other to finish his/her utterance before contributing their own. This is as much a utilitarian convention as mere manners – a conversation, given the aforementioned definition, would logically cease to take place if the agents involved insisted on speaking even when it was plain that the other was trying to contribute. It is, additionally, comforting to know that the other person respects your opinions enough not to continually interrupt you. The best example of this occurs in the Houses of Parliament – a supposed ‘debating’ chamber which is often anything but, due to the failure of the members to observe the turn-taking code. Note, however, that a person rarely explictly states that they have finished their utterance and are now awaiting yours. Intriguing exceptions to this are in two-way radios, where many social and psychological cues are lacking, and thus it is more difficult for speakers to follow turn-taking. A more recent example might be computer-mediated communication. I will examine these two later. The potential for one to reply can be missed, deliberately or not, so that the first person may contribute once more. Failure to realise this can result in an awkward ‘pregnant pause’, or, as I have mentioned, a cacophany of competing voices in a large crowd. Sacks et al (1974, 1978) suggested some regulations of such conversation – a ‘local management system’ where, at certain points, the potential for a change of speakers arises. Called transition relevance places, once again, this is not compulsory. Another fundamental feature of conversation is the idea of adjacency pairs. Posited by Goffman (1976), an example would be found in a question-answer session. Both conversing parties are aware that a response is required to a question; moreover, a particular response to a given question. I might invite a friend into my house and ask: “Would you like a biscuit?” To which the adjacency pair response is expected to be either “Yes” or “No”. My friend may be allergic to chocolate, however, and place an insertion sequence into the response: “Do you have any ginger snaps?” the reply to which would cause him to modify his answer accordingly. This assumes, however, a certain equality in terms of power, or authority. For example, if a lecturer was to call a coffee-break mid-lecture, he might ask: “Would you like to return in ten minutes?” Where he would expect a willing response. He would not expect his students to set conditions or make enquiries of what they can do with the allocated ten minutes. How may such observations be utilised in our social interactions? In the above consideration of turn-taking, if the second agent did not take their opportunity to respond to the first, the implication is that they have nothing to say about the topic. But perhaps the transition relevance place was one in which the second agent was in fact selected, but failed to respond, or responded in an inappropriate manner? A contestant on Mastermind is subject to an ‘enforced’ turn-taking scenario, where non-answer of a question-answer adjacency pair (as opposed to ‘Pass’ or ‘Don’t know’) breaches the expectations of the audience and compare – one might choose to sit down in the spotlight and say nothing for two entire minutes. Alternatively, one could respond to th