Using Conversation Analysis for Business and Management Students by David Greatbatch Timothy Clark
Author:David Greatbatch, Timothy Clark [David Greatbatch, Timothy Clark]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Social Science, Research
ISBN: 9781473948266
Google: YVHKtAEACAAJ
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Published: 2018-01-04T04:38:31+00:00
Peters provides the messages that evoke laughter with both emphasis and clearly projectable completion points by, inter alia, using a puzzle-solution format (Atkinson, 1984a, 1984b; Heritage and Greatbatch, 1986). Thus he begins by establishing a puzzle in the minds of the audience members (lines 1â3): what did Ross Perot see as the difference between EDS and GM? He then offers a two-part solution which is formed as a contrast (lines 3â4 and 8â9 and 11). In this way, he highlights the contents of the messages against a background of surrounding speech materials. He also provides the audience members with resources to anticipate the completion of the two messages, for they can match each part of the emerging solution to the puzzle in order to infer what it will take for it to be complete. In the case of the second part of the solution/contrast, they can also match it against the first part. In both instances, Peters confirms the relevance of laughter by ceding the floor until the audienceâs laughter ends (lines 6 and 12) and then, when he resumes speaking, neither asserting nor otherwise indicating that the audienceâs laughter was inappropriate or unexpected (lines 13â15).
Peters does not solely rely on the âhumorousâ content of his remarks to establish the relevance of audience laughter; he also âinvitesâ audience laughter by using a range of nonverbal techniques. In the first case of laughter (line 6), which follows Petersâs depiction of Perotâs commendation of EDS, Peters uses comedic gestures, facial expressions and prosody. As he quotes Perot on EDS, he suddenly leans forward, glares at a section of the audience and speaks louder as he adopts a âmock angryâ tone (lines 4â5). Then, as he completes the quotation (âyou kill itâ), he bares his teeth as he âspitsâ out the words. Together with Perotâs incongruous metaphorical imagery â seeing and killing snakes in a corporate context â Petersâ nonverbal actions establish the possible relevance of audience laughter. In the second case of audience laughter (line 12), which follows Petersâ depiction of Perotâs disparagement of GM (lines 8â9 and 11), Peters, reverting to a âlow keyâ form of speech delivery, establishes the possible relevance of laughter by leaning forward and smiling at the audience as he completes the quotation (line 10). Thus, Peters does not solely rely on the content of his message to indicate to audience members that his message is humorous and that laughter is an appropriate response.
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