Synopses & Reviews
Through everyday talk, individuals forge the ties that can make a family. Family members use language to manage a household, create and maintain relationships, and negotiate and reinforce values and beliefs. The studies gathered in
Family Talk are based on a unique research project in which four dual-income American families recorded everything they said for a week.
Family Talk extends our understanding of family discourse and of how family members construct, negotiate, and enact their identities as individuals and as families. The volume also contributes to the discourse analysis of naturally-occurring interaction and makes significant contributions to theories of framing in interaction.
Family Talk addresses issues central to the academic discipline of discourse analysis as well as to families themselves, including decision-making and conflict-talk, the development of gendered family roles, sociability with and socialization of children, the development of social and political beliefs, and the interconnectedness of professional and family life. It provides illuminating insights into the subtleties of family conversation, and will be of interest to scholars and students in sociolinguistics, discourse studies, communications, anthropological linguistics, cultural studies, psychology, and other fields concerned with the language of everyday interaction or family interaction.
Review
"This is a must read for linguists, and its multidisciplinary approach and accessibility recommend it to anyone studying or interested in family relationships. Highly recommended. All readers, all levels." --Choice
Review
' \"Family Talk produces fascinating insights into family discourse and is unique in its inclusion of the understudied language of fathers and its use of uncensored, extended recordings. This book is a captivating study on discourse in today\'s modern-day families.\" --Journal of Marriage and Family
\"This is a must read for linguists, and its multidisciplinary approach and accessibility recommend it to anyone studying or interested in family relationships. Highly recommended. All readers, all levels.\" --Choice
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About the Author
Deborah Tannen is University Professor and Professor of Linguistics at Georgetown University. Her twenty books include Talking Voices, Gender and Discourse, Conversational Style, You're Wearing THAT?, Talking from 9 to 5, That's Not What I Meant!, You Just Don't Understand, and The Argument Culture.
Cynthia Gordon is a postdoctoral fellow at the Emory Center for Myth and Ritual in American Life (MARIAL) in Atlanta, Georgia. Her publications have appeared in Language in Society, Discourse and Society, Research on Language and Social Interaction, Narrative Inquiry, The Journal of Genetic Counseling, and Text and Talk.
Shari Kendall is Assistant Professor of Linguistics in the Department of English at Texas A and M University. Her publications include articles and chapters in Discourse and Society, Text and Talk, The Handbook of Language and Gender, and Speaking Out: The Female Voice in Public Contexts.
Table of Contents
About the Contributors
Transciption Conventions
1. Introduction: Family Talk, Shari Kendall
Part 1: Interactional Dynamics: Power and Solidarity
2. Power Maneuvers and Connection Maneuvers in Family Interaction, Deborah Tannen
3. Talking the Dog: Framing Pets as Interactional Resources in Family Discourse, Deborah Tannen
4. "I Feel Just Horribly Embarrassed When She Does That": Constituting a Mother's Identity, Cyntha Gordon
5. Finding the Right Balance between Connection and Control: A Father's Identity Construction in Conversations with His College-Age Daughter, Diana Marinova
Part II: Gendered Identities in Dual-Income Families
6. Father as Breadwinner, Mother as Worker: Gendered Positions in Feminist and Traditional Discourses of Work and Family, Shari Kendall
7. Gatekeeping in the Family: How Family Members Position One Another as Decision Makers, Alexandra Johnson
8. A Working Father: One Man's Talk About Parenting at Work, Cynthia Gordon, Deborah Tannen, Aliza Sacknovitz
Part III: Family Values and Beliefs
9. "Al Gore's Our Guy": Linguistically Constructing a Family Political Identity, Cynthia Gordon
10. Sharing Common Ground: The Role of Place Reference in Parent-Child Conversation, Philip LeVine
11. Family Members Interacting While Watching TV, Alla V. Tovares
Index