In:Grammar in Action: Building comprehensive grammars of talk-in-interaction
Edited by Jakob Steensig, Maria Jørgensen, Jan Lindström, Nicholas Mikkelsen, Karita Suomalainen and Søren Sandager Sørensen
[Studies in Language and Social Interaction 37] 2025
► pp. 366–391
Chapter 12Action formation, projection, and participation framework
Pseudoclefts in Swedish talk-in-interaction
Published online: 3 June 2025
https://doi.org/10.1075/slsi.37.12hen
https://doi.org/10.1075/slsi.37.12hen
Abstract
This chapter discusses the structural, interactional and situational specifics of the pseudocleft
construction in Swedish talk-in-interaction, specifying its use as a resource for turn and action formation but also
as a means to regulate discursive trajectories and the participation framework. An analysis of nearly 100 instances of
pseudoclefts collected from casual conversations and institutional interactions revealed that this format is a
recognizable and conventionally available building block of interaction exhibiting a regular grammatical pattern which
can be characterized as a compound turn constructional unit. The pseudocleft is used for discourse organization in
marking transitions in the pragmatic course of an interaction. This gives the construction a projecting force on the
level of sequence organization. Our analysis illustrates that pseudoclefts are not dedicated to accomplishing one
single kind of action but typically contribute to the formation of directive-commissive and evaluative actions. The
pseudoclefts in our datasets were often used by participants to claim an expert position. This implies a rather strong
link between the grammatical format and the participation framework in which the format casts one of the participants
as possibly more knowledgeable and as the one who controls the agenda, has the right to direct others, and to make
assessments.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Turn design
- 2.1Grammatical structure
- 2.1.1Standard structure
- 2.1.2Structural variation
- 2.2Information structure and projection
- 2.1Grammatical structure
- 3.Sequence and action formation
- 3.1Accomplishing directive-commissive and evaluative social actions
- 3.2Initiating discursive transitions
- 4.Participation framework and epistemic positioning
- 5.Conclusion and outlook
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