2022
DOI: 10.1111/modl.12759
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Emergent L2 Grammars in and for Social Interaction: Introduction to the Special Issue

Abstract: Setting the stage for the central themes and the articles in this special issue, this introduction delineates the epistemological confluences, complementarities, and differences among conversation analysis (CA), on the one hand, and 2 strands of usage-based linguistics, on the other-namely, usage-based secondlanguage acquisition (SLA) and interactional linguistics. This implies depicting how an increased interest in actual usage within the field of linguistics, including usage-based SLA, has converged with the… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1

Citation Types

0
3
0

Year Published

2022
2022
2025
2025

Publication Types

Select...
7

Relationship

0
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 13 publications
(3 citation statements)
references
References 158 publications
(185 reference statements)
0
3
0
Order By: Relevance
“…It is also situation‐based, context‐sensitive, and recipient‐designed in ways that it is “‘publicly’ observable within participants’ practices” and “brought about by the social interaction at hand” (Pekarek Doehler, 2019, p. 30). When investigating IC, the focus is on participants’ ways of constructing social actions collaboratively in the here and now, and increasingly also on how they do this by drawing on different multimodal resources, not only language (see, e.g., Pekarek Doehler & Eskildsen, 2022). When it comes to L2 IC, learners are viewed as interactionally competent participants with existing interactional competencies that they need to recalibrate and refine, although the relationship between IC and the development of one's linguistic skills is not straightforward (Pekarek Doehler, 2019, p. 46).…”
Section: Embodied L2 Interactional Competence and Grammar‐for‐interac...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It is also situation‐based, context‐sensitive, and recipient‐designed in ways that it is “‘publicly’ observable within participants’ practices” and “brought about by the social interaction at hand” (Pekarek Doehler, 2019, p. 30). When investigating IC, the focus is on participants’ ways of constructing social actions collaboratively in the here and now, and increasingly also on how they do this by drawing on different multimodal resources, not only language (see, e.g., Pekarek Doehler & Eskildsen, 2022). When it comes to L2 IC, learners are viewed as interactionally competent participants with existing interactional competencies that they need to recalibrate and refine, although the relationship between IC and the development of one's linguistic skills is not straightforward (Pekarek Doehler, 2019, p. 46).…”
Section: Embodied L2 Interactional Competence and Grammar‐for‐interac...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Along with the embodied turn, studies on grammar have also started to investigate how different multimodal resources are used to design TCUs and interactional turns, and social actions more broadly (e.g., Pekarek Doehler & Eskildsen, 2022; Pekarek Doehler et al., 2022). In terms of turn beginnings, Deppermann (2013) has argued that participants have four tasks to consider when designing turns that are fitted to the sequential and temporal contingencies of interaction: “to achieve joint attention to the upcoming turn, to display uptake of prior turn(s), to deal with projections emanating from them, and to project properties of the upcoming turn” (p. 91).…”
Section: Embodied L2 Interactional Competence and Grammar‐for‐interac...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The studies are firmly rooted in the functional and usage‐based tradition that argues for the social nature of language and learning. In the introduction, Pekarek Doehler & Eskildsen (2022, this issue) situate the studies within an integrated framework building on usage‐based models of language and L2 learning (e.g., Ellis, 2002, 2015; Hopper, 1987; Tomasello, 2003) interactional linguistics (Couper–Kuhlen & Selting, 2018; Hall, 2019; Mushin & Pekarek Doehler, 2021; Ochs et al., 1996; Thompson et al., 2015) and ethnomethodological conversation analysis (for recent overviews, see Hellermann et al., 2019, and Kunitz et al., 2021, for CA‐SLA in the wild and in the classroom, respectively). As Pekarek Doehler and Eskildsen argue, these fields converge in their conceptualization of linguistic patterns as tied to communicative and interactional functions.…”
Section: Respecifiying L2 Grammarmentioning
confidence: 99%