Attributional Explanation:
- 1 December 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Language and Social Psychology
- Vol. 18 (4) , 356-376
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0261927x99018004001
Abstract
The social sciences have recently seen the formation and expansion of a new research paradigm—discursive psychology. What will be especially useful now is to detail and invigorate its theory with empirical discourse analysis. One significant area is the notion of attributional explanation, as this occurs commonly in discursive interaction. Accordingly, the present article explores its organizational and functional richness. As data, stretches of interviews are examined in which explanations are presupposed, implied, or described. From a social-constructionist-linguistics perspective, it will be seen that attributional explanation can be hypothetical and negotiable in nature, it can be structured in several layers of a different character each, and it can be associated with self-identity. Findings such as these reveal that natural human attribution is vastly more varied, intricate, and sophisticated than has been realized and that human beings are more resourceful in their sense-making than has been presumed.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Discursive attributions and cross-cultural communicationPragmatics, 2022
- Cultural Perceptions: Exploiting the Unexpected of the OtherCulture & Psychology, 1995
- The Discursive MindPublished by SAGE Publications ,1994
- Principles of Critical Discourse AnalysisDiscourse & Society, 1993
- Explaining in conversation: Towards an argument modelEuropean Journal of Social Psychology, 1992
- Cultural psychology – what is it?Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1990
- Conversational processes and causal explanation.Psychological Bulletin, 1990
- Attribution theory and intercultural communicationPublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1987
- The processes of causal attribution.American Psychologist, 1973
- The psychology of interpersonal relations.Published by American Psychological Association (APA) ,1958