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This study presents a new perspective on small talk and its crucial
role in everyday communication. The new approach presented here is
supported by analyses of interactional data in specific settings -
private and public, face-to-face and telephone talk. They vary from
gossip at the family dinner table and intimate 'keeping in touch'
phone conversations, to interpersonally-focused talk in
institutional settings, such as the government office and the
university research seminar. Drawing on a range of methodological
approaches, including Discourse Analysis and Pragmatics,
Interpersonal Communication and Conversation Analysis, the author
elevates small talk to a new status, as functionally multifaceted,
but central to social interaction as a whole.
This second edition of the Handbook of Communication and Aging
Research captures the ever-changing and expanding domain of aging
research. Since it was first recognized that there is more to
social aging than demography, gerontology has needed a
communication perspective. Like the first edition, this handbook
sets out to demonstrate that aging is not only an individual
process but an interactive one. The study of communication can lead
to an understanding of what it means to grow old. We may age
physiologically and chronologically, but our social aging--how we
behave as social actors toward others, and even how we align
ourselves with or come to understand the signs of difference or
change as we age--are phenomena achieved primarily through
communication experiences. Synthesizing the vast amount of research
that has been published on communication and aging in numerous
international outlets over the last three decades, the book's
contributors include scholars from North America and the United
Kingdom who are active researchers in the perspectives covered in
their particular chapter. Many of the chapters work to deny earlier
images of aging as involving normative decrement to provide a
picture of aging as a process of development involving positive
choices and providing new opportunities. A recuring theme in many
chapters is that of the heterogeneity of the group of people who
are variously categorized as older, aged, elderly, or over 65. The
contributors review the literature analytically, in a way that
reveals not only current theoretical and methodological approaches
to communication and aging research but also sets the future
agenda. This handbook will be of great interest to scholars and
researchers in gerontology, developmental psychology, and
communication, and, in this updated edition, will continue to play
a key role in the study of communication and aging.
This second edition of the "Handbook of Communication and Aging
Research" captures the ever-changing and expanding domain of aging
research. Since it was first recognized that there is more to
social aging than demography, gerontology has needed a
communication perspective. Like the first edition, this handbook
sets out to demonstrate that aging is not only an individual
process but an interactive one. The study of communication can lead
to an understanding of what it means to grow old. We may age
physiologically and chronologically, but our social aging--how we
behave as social actors toward others, and even how we align
ourselves with or come to understand the signs of difference or
change as we age--are phenomena achieved primarily through
communication experiences.
Synthesizing the vast amount of research that has been published on
communication and aging in numerous international outlets over the
last three decades, the book's contributors include scholars from
North America and the United Kingdom who are active researchers in
the perspectives covered in their particular chapter. Many of the
chapters work to deny earlier images of aging as involving
normative decrement to provide a picture of aging as a process of
development involving positive choices and providing new
opportunities. A recuring theme in many chapters is that of the
heterogeneity of the group of people who are variously categorized
as older, aged, elderly, or over 65. The contributors review the
literature analytically, in a way that reveals not only current
theoretical and methodological approaches to communication and
aging research but also sets the future agenda.
This handbook will be of great interestto scholars and researchers
in gerontology, developmental psychology, and communication, and,
in this updated edition, will continue to play a key role in the
study of communication and aging.
This study presents a new perspective on small talk and its crucial
role in everyday communication. The new approach presented here is
supported by analyses of interactional data in specific settings -
private and public, face-to-face and telephone talk. They vary from
gossip at the family dinner table and intimate 'keeping in touch'
phone conversations, to interpersonally-focused talk in
institutional settings, such as the government office and the
university research seminar. Drawing on a range of methodological
approaches, including Discourse Analysis and Pragmatics,
Interpersonal Communication and Conversation Analysis, the author
elevates small talk to a new status, as functionally multifaceted,
but central to social interaction as a whole.
The theory of accommodation is concerned with motivations
underlying and consequences arising from ways in which we adapt our
language and communication patterns toward others. Since
accommodation theory's emergence in the early l970s, it has
attracted empirical attention across many disciplines and has been
elaborated and expanded many times. In Contexts of Accommodation,
accommodation theory is presented as a basis for sociolinguistic
explanation, and it is the applied perspective that predominates
this edited collection. The book seeks to demonstrate how the core
concepts and relationships invoked by accommodation theory are
available for addressing altogether pragmatic concerns.
Accommodative processes can, for example, facilitate or impede
language learners' proficiency in a second language as well as
immigrants' acceptance into certain host communities; affect
audience ratings and thereby the life of a television program;
affect reaction to defendants in court and hence the nature of the
judicial outcome; and be an enabling or detrimental force in
allowing handicapped people to fulfil their communicative
potential. Contexts of Accommodation will appeal to researchers and
advanced students in language and communication sciences, as well
as to sociolinguists, anthropologists, sociologists and
psychologists.
The theory of accommodation is concerned with motivations underlying and consequences arising from ways in which we adapt our language and communication patterns toward others. Since accommodation theory's emergence in the early l970s, it has attracted empirical attention across many disciplines and has been elaborated and expanded many times. In Contexts of Accommodation, accommodation theory is presented as a basis for sociolinguistic explanation, and it is the applied perspective that predominates this edited collection. The book seeks to demonstrate how the core concepts and relationships invoked by accommodation theory are available for addressing altogether pragmatic concerns. Accommodative processes can, for example, facilitate or impede language learners' proficiency in a second language as well as immigrants' acceptance into certain host communities; affect audience ratings and thereby the life of a television program; affect reaction to defendants in court and hence the nature of the judicial outcome; and be an enabling or detrimental force in allowing handicapped people to fulfill their communicative potential.
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