Whose Terms? Whose Ordinariness? Rhetoric and Ideology in Conversation Analysis
- 1 October 1999
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Discourse & Society
- Vol. 10 (4) , 543-558
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0957926599010004005
Abstract
This article examines Schegloff's (1997) defence of Conversation Analysis (CA) and his attack on critical discourse analysis. The article focuses on Schegloff's claims that CA takes an empirical stance without a priori assumptions and that it examines participants' talk in `their own terms'. It is suggested that these claims are problematic, and that CA, as depicted by Schegloff, contains an ideological view of the social world. This can be seen by examining CA's own rhetoric, which conversation analysts themselves tend to take for granted. First, CA uses a specialist rhetoric which is literally not the participants' own terms. Moreover, this specialist rhetoric enables conversation analysts to `disattend' to the topics of conversation. Second, CA's `foundational rhetoric' is examined. It is suggested that this foundational rhetoric, which includes terms such as `conversation', `member', etc., conveys a participatory view of the world, in which equal rights of speakership are often assumed. The assumptions of these rhetorical conventions are revealed if they are applied to talk in which direct power is exercised. In this respect, CA is not, as Schegloff suggests, ideologically neutral, but habitually deploys a rhetoric that conveys a contestable view of social order.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- IdeologyPublished by Wiley ,2016
- IdeologyPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2014
- Positioning and Interpretative Repertoires: Conversation Analysis and Post-Structuralism in DialogueDiscourse & Society, 1998
- Reply to WetherellDiscourse & Society, 1998
- The dialogic unconscious: Psychoanalysis, discursive psychology and the nature of repressionBritish Journal of Social Psychology, 1997
- Whose Text? Whose Context?Discourse & Society, 1997
- Death and Furniture: the rhetoric, politics and theology of bottom line arguments against relativismHistory of the Human Sciences, 1995
- Conversation AnalysisPublished by SAGE Publications ,1995
- Repopulating the Depopulated Pages of Social PsychologyTheory & Psychology, 1994
- The Rhetorical TurnPublished by University of Chicago Press ,1990