Multimodal Performance and Interaction in Focus Groups

Focus group interviews have seen explosive growth in recent years. They provide evaluations of social science, educational, and marketing projects by soliciting opinions from a number of participants on a given topic. However, there is more to the focus group than soliciting mere opinions. Moving be...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gilbert, Kristin Enola, Matoesian, Gregory
Format: eBook Book
Language:English
Published: Netherlands John Benjamins Publishing Company 2021
John Benjamins
Edition:1
Series:Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture
Subjects:
ISBN:9789027260208, 9027260206, 9027208379, 9789027208378
Online Access:Get full text
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Table of Contents:
  • Summary and relevance of the findings -- Final thoughts on community policing -- Appendix. Data-methodology -- Transcription conventions used -- References -- Index
  • Intro -- Multimodal Performance and Interaction in Focus Groups -- Editorial page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Table of contents -- Acknowledgements -- Preface -- Introduction -- Community policing: What is it? -- The Community policing training partnership CPTP (pseudonym) -- Plan of the book -- Conclusion -- Chapter 1. Focus groups: A multimodal approach -- The focus group interview -- Multimodal conduct -- Gesture -- Gaze, movement, and posture -- Part 1. Sociocultural organization in multimodal action -- Chapter 2. They thought we were a hick town -- Professional expertise -- Community -- Collective identity -- Expert identity -- Community and expertise as interacting symbolic systems -- Conclusion -- Chapter 3. We're doin this here now -- Example 1. We're doin this here now -- Hey Bob: Social organization in multimodal quotation -- Criss-crossing streams of sociocultural opposition -- Conclusion -- Part 2. Multimodal rituals of stance and positioning -- Chapter 4. Struck by speech -- Introduction -- 'Zeroing In' -- Struck by speech embodied -- Discursive constitution of jurisdictional identity -- Conclusion -- Chapter 6. Poetic positioning and multimodal hypotheticals -- Narratives and interactional positioning -- Embedded and embodied hypotheticals -- Positioning as an "outside" and "objective" observer -- The interactive escalation of jurisdictional conflict -- Conclusion -- Part 3. Interactional troubles and contextualization cues -- Chapter 7. When the dust cleared up -- Data: Example 1 -- Embodied evaluation -- Affiliation and participation -- Gaze and participation -- Linguistic ideologies in institutional talk -- Discussion: Macro-Micro integration -- Conclusion -- Chapter 8. We have four hundred and seventy six neighborhood watches -- The data -- Contextualization cues and crosstalk -- Conclusion -- Conclusion
  • References --
  • Chapter 8. We have four hundred and seventy six neighborhood watches --
  • Chapter 7. When the dust cleared up --
  • Part 2. Multimodal rituals of stance and positioning --
  • Chapter 1. Focus groups --
  • Preface --
  • Index
  • Conclusion --
  • Chapter 4. Struck by speech --
  • Chapter 6. Poetic positioning and multimodal hypotheticals --
  • Prelim pages --
  • Acknowledgements --
  • Transcription conventions used --
  • Chapter 2. They thought we were a hick town --
  • Appendix. Data-methodology --
  • Part 1. Sociocultural organization in multimodal action --
  • Chapter 3. We’re doin this here now --
  • Table of contents --
  • Part 3. Interactional troubles and contextualization cues --
  • Introduction --
  • Chapter 5. Interactional positioning --