06040nam 2200769Ia 450 991096597590332120240313020831.097866139067559781283594301128359430797890272733769027273375(CKB)2560000000093324(EBL)1013044(OCoLC)811410900(SSID)ssj0000710986(PQKBManifestationID)12307430(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000710986(PQKBWorkID)10673672(PQKB)10576616(MiAaPQ)EBC1013044(Au-PeEL)EBL1013044(CaPaEBR)ebr10595285(CaONFJC)MIL390675(DE-B1597)721617(DE-B1597)9789027273376(EXLCZ)99256000000009332420120611d2012 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrThe appropriation of media in everyday life /edited by Ruth Ayass, Cornelia Gerhardt1st ed.Amsterdam ;Philadelphia John Benjamins20121 online resource (316 p.)Pragmatics & beyond new series ;v. 224Description based upon print version of record.9789027256294 9027256292 Includes bibliographical references and index.The Appropriation of Media in Everyday Life; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; 1. Introduction; 2. Everydayification and boundary dissolution; 3. Disconnection and interweaving; 4. The role of method; 5. Discourse and conversation analysis; References; Overview of the volume; Patterns of television reception; Communicative activities during the television reception; 1. Introduction; 2. General structures of recipient communication; 3. Changes in preference structures in television reception talk: Directness and disagreements3.1 Disagreements3.2 Backbiting; 3.3 Corrections; 4. The reception of different media genres: The case of television advertisement; 5. Conclusion; References; Appendix; Transcription Conventions; Notability; 1. Introduction; 2. Research on television reception; 3. Analogies of notability to tellability and related concepts; 4. The ATTAC-Corpus; 5. The workings of notability; 5.1 Notability licensing other-interruption; 5.2 Notability licensing self-interruption; 5.3 Simultaneousness between the viewers' talk and the media text; 6. Multimodality: More than words7. Notability and its connection to the exogenous event8. Conclusion; References; Appendix; Transcription conventions; Intertextual quotation; 1. Introduction; 2. Intertextuality, intertextual repetition, intertextual quotation; 3. Data description and method of analysis; 4. Intertextual quotation as evaluative stance; 5. Conversational strategies of intertextual quoting; 6. Pragmatic strategies of intertextual quoting; 7. Conclusion; References; Appendix; Transcription conventions; part ii. The reception of media genres; Watching out loud; 1. Introduction2. Television and everyday family life and talk3. Dialogicality and intertextuality in everyday discourse and media texts; 4. Who wants to be a millionaire?; 5. Data and methodology; 6. Watching out loud: Family members' engagement with the millionaire quiz show; 6.1 Television quiz show as 'our' show; 6.2 "Is that your final answer?": Appropriation of kernel phrases; 6.3 Joking engagement with the text and images of millionaire; 6.4 Millionaire as a resource in (re)constructing family relations and identities; 7. Conclusion; References; Appendix; Transcription conventionsThe construction of audience community via answering machine1. Introduction; 2. Research agenda; 3. The radio broadcast; 4. The audience community; 4.1 From answering machine to cafés repaires; 4.2 The messages on the answering machine: Structural aspects; 4.3 From audience to community; 5. The messages on the answering machine: Between shouting session and story-telling; 5.1 Evaluations of the broadcast; 5.2 Assessments and argumentation; 5.3 Reports and other forms of witnessing; 5.4 Announcements; 6. Conclusion; References; Appendix; Transcription Conventions'I wanna become a real rock star'This volume contributes to the burgeoning field of interactional linguistic media studies. It focuses on how people appropriate media in their daily lives. Thus here it is not the talk in the medium itself, but naturally occurring interactions in different media reception situations that are analysed. The idea that media function like a hypodermic needle injecting messages into the masses has long been questioned. Still, the actual moment when people use media in their daily lives has largely been ignored in media studies. This book analyses the minutiae of the moment when people actively appropriate media for their own purposes in different fashions. The reception communities analysed include families watching television, girls gossiping about a talent show, teenagers playing video games, a team of fire-men implementing a new medium in their workplace, radio listeners“ phone ins and others. The languages studied comprise English, German, French, Swedish and Finnish.Pragmatics & Beyond New SeriesMass media and languageDiscourse analysisConversation analysisMass media and language.Discourse analysis.Conversation analysis.302.23AP 17120SEPArvkAyass Ruth1801907Gerhardt Cornelia872417MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910965975903321The appropriation of media in everyday life4347371UNINA