Article published In: Language Management Approach: Probing the Concept of "Noting"
Edited by Helen Marriott and Jiří Nekvapil
[Journal of Asian Pacific Communication 22:2] 2012
► pp. 174–194
Noting as revealed by “checking” in second language interactions
A simple (yet organized) management strategy
Published online: 2 November 2012
https://doi.org/10.1075/japc.22.2.03she
https://doi.org/10.1075/japc.22.2.03she
This paper uses Language Management Theory (LMT) to explore situations in which non-native speakers of a language explicitly reveal that they have noted a potential linguistic deviation. This can be paraphrased as the concept of “checking”, identifiable through the use of question intonation for the trouble source item, phrases such as “is that right?”, or the offering of alternative words or forms. This process is explored in Czech conversations between native speakers and American missionaries. In the analysis, two major points are made: 1) There is a limit to the types of deviations which are noted in this way, as checking is mainly done in cases of potential lexical and morphological deviations, and 2) In order for this strategy to be realized, there must be an appropriate categorial context for its execution, particularly in regard to the categories that speakers assign (or do not assign) to one another situationally, such as “non-native speaker” or “language expert”. In this way, simple management can be directly connected to organized management in that missionaries learning a foreign language are instructed to utilize their interlocutors as “language experts”. The paper also considers methodological tools for LMT analysts to uncover the fact that noting has occurred.
Keywords: language management, second language interactions, noting, missionaries., Czech
Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Van Oss, Victoria, Esli Struys, Piet Van Avermaet & Wendelien Vantieghem
Sherman, Tamah
2020. Researching language management in Central Europe. In A language management approach to language problem [Studies in World Language Problems, 7], ► pp. 69 ff.
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