In:Children’s Peer Cultures in Dialogue: Participation, hierarchy, and social identity in diverse schools
Nicola Nasi
[Dialogue Studies 34] 2024
► pp. 201–202
Index
Published online: 26 August 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/ds.34.index
https://doi.org/10.1075/ds.34.index
A
- access 49, 95, 149
- accumulative organization 43, 49–51, 160
- adult-child social worlds 53–55, 87, 128
- affordances 40, 145
- agency 41–43, 53–58
- assessment 27–28, 39–41, 60–61, 71, 146
- authoritative discourse94
- autonomy 136–137, 163
- arguing 60, 115, 128–129
B
- Bakhtin, Mikhail 65, 73, 94, 145
- Bateson, Gregory14
- belonging 26, 48–51, 160–163
- Bourdieu, Pierre 36, 42–44
- Blum-Kulka, Shoshana 26, 61–63, 114–115
C
- child language brokering37
- childhood, construct of 53–54, 57, 71–72, 161
- conversation analysis 10–12, 28–31
- classroom interaction 28–31
- cognitive development 33, 59–60, 151
- communicative project19
- community of practice 22–23
- cooperative learning163
- correction 62–63, 83–85, 147–148, 162
- Corsaro, William 53–54, 69–70
- culture
22–23
- peer 58–61
D
- declaratives 35, 97, 100
- deictics 38–39, 79
- deontics 113–114, 98, 157
- designedly incomplete utterances 80–81
- diachrony 9–12, 50, 71, 160
- dialogue, definition of 14–15
- digital life-worlds58
- discourse, broader/societal 15, 49–51, 159
- directive 63–64, 84–85, 88–89, 93, 100, 107–108, 118
- diversity
21–22, 48–51
- dialogic construction of 25–28
- Duranti, Alessandro 11, 16, 140
E
- education, formal and informal24
- epistemics 63, 97–98, 113
- ethnography
10–11
- of communication33
- eliciting 78–80, 130
- entextualization 73–74, 105, 143
- everyday life 13–14, 58, 139–140
- evaluation 30–31, 39–41, 102–104, 136
- exclusion 49–51, 69–72, 94–95, 113, 127–130
F
- family interaction 53, 56, 141
- Finland47
- format tying 18, 118, 145
- formulation
91–93, 105, 153
- reformulation 76, 79–80, 120–121, 127, 134
- Foucault, Michel97
G
- gaze 81, 91–92, 118, 134, 143
- Garfinkel, Harold 15, 19, 140
- gender 23, 60, 68
- genre 76, 141
- gesture 38–39, 78–79, 85, 104
- Giddens, Anthony 41–43, 96
- Goffman, Erving 49, 73–74, 139
- Goodwin, Charles 32, 37, 155
- Goodwin, Marjorie 19, 60, 111, 141
- gossip 60–61, 71
H
- habitus43
- heteroglossia 65–67
- honorifics 45–46, 70, 102
- humor 143, 147–148, 153
- Husserl, Edmund16
- Hymes, Dell 33, 36, 139
I
- ideology
35, 44–45, 55–56
- language 45, 66
- identity 44–46, 48, 64
- improvisation 139–140
- inclusion 49–51, 69–72, 127–130
- indexicality 34–35
- Ingold, Tim 13, 34, 139
- institutional interaction 28–31
- insult 59, 71, 140
- IRE format 30, 83
- Italy 19, 26, 37, 55, 61, 78, 81, 84, 87, 90, 102, 106, 110, 116, 120, 124, 131, 142, 144, 146
L
- Labov, William 59, 139–141
- learning environment 63, 77, 162
- Levinson, Stephen 11, 13–15
- language socialization 33–34, 41–43
- language games 19, 156
- life-world 34, 59
- Linell, Per 14–19, 33, 139
- literacy82
M
- materiality 102–103, 159
- marginalization 25–28, 49–51, 160–161
- mediation123
- Mehan, Hugh 30, 92
- membership categorization 44, 68, 109–112, 119–121
- metalinguistic awareness 59, 86, 151
- metapragmatic awareness 59, 86, 151
- monolingualism 43, 65–67, 77
- multimodality 35, 37–39, 143–145
- micro-macro link 41–42, 50–51, 96–97
- morality 86–89, 113, 131
- multilingualism 39, 45–46, 65–69, 152–153
- multiparty interaction 71, 113–114, 129–130, 152
N
- narratives 51, 71, 76, 160–161
- non-linearity 40–41, 51, 114
- norms
73–74
- semantic 77–78
- pragmatic 80–81
- social and moral 86–87
- normativity 31, 88–89, 162
O
- Ochs, Elinor 33–35
P
- participation
34, 40, 49–50, 69–72, 115
- framework 49, 68, 90–91, 114
- performance 39, 68, 140, 145–146, 151
- phenomenology 13, 16–17
- polyphony 24, 73–74
- Pontecorvo, Clotilde 60, 115, 138
- power 48, 67, 96–99
- play, pretend
50, 59, 99, 141
- verbal 59, 141
- preschool 45–46, 68, 70, 83, 99–100
- primary school 25, 26, 37, 47, 55, 62, 66, 70, 78, 81, 84, 87–88, 90, 102, 106, 109, 117, 120, 124, 131, 142, 144, 146, 152
Q
- question
24, 29–30, 98
- successive 78–79
- rhetorical 89, 118, 148
R
- Rampton, Ben 68, 141, 149
- reading 82–84
- reference
55–56, 70, 103–104, 118
- term 78–80
- register102
- repetition 62–63, 70, 93, 140–141, 150–151
- reported speech 102, 109–111, 124–126
- resistance 42–44, 46–47, 87–88, 90–92, 106–108, 117–119
- reproach 55–56, 66, 90–91, 109–111, 131–134
- reproduction
43, 57, 137, 140
- interpretative 53, 141
- request 78–79, 81, 99
- Rogoff, Barbara 32–34, 41–43
S
- Sacks, Harvey 10–11, 44, 112
- Schieffelin, Bambi 33–34
- school culture 74–75
- Schütz, Alfred 13, 16
- second language 30–31, 46–47, 128, 151–154
- secondary adjustments 42, 54
- secondary school 46, 70, 75
- semiotic systems 13–15
- social interaction 9–10, 14–15
- Spain25
- stance 35, 48, 97–98
- standardization 43, 65
- status 48, 97–99
- storytelling 60–61, 143
- structure 31, 41–43, 67
- style 68, 141, 149
- subteaching 74–75
- subversive compliance 55, 74, 87, 131
- supervision 136–137, 163
- swearwords 59, 71, 140
- Sweden 40, 66, 75, 152
T
- teacher 25–26, 29–31, 74–75, 84–85, 130
- Thailand 45–46
- third-person reference 49, 91, 107, 130
- translanguaging67
- turn design 30, 97
U
- USA 83, 99–100
V
- ventriloquism102
- vicious circle 39–41
- Vygotsky, Lev 33, 53, 61, 139
W
- Wittgenstein, Ludwig 19, 34
- writing 84–86, 104
