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LINGUIST List 19.2659

Sun Aug 31 2008

Confs: Discourse Analysis/Germany

Editor for this issue: Ania Kubisz <anialinguistlist.org>


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        1.    Arnulf Deppermann, International Conference on Conversation Analysis 2010


Message 1: International Conference on Conversation Analysis 2010
Date: 31-Aug-2008
From: Arnulf Deppermann <deppermannids-mannheim.de>
Subject: International Conference on Conversation Analysis 2010
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International Conference on Conversation Analysis 2010
Short Title: ICCA10

Date: 04-Jul-2010 - 08-Jul-2010
Location: Mannheim, Germany
Contact: Arnulf Deppermann
Contact Email: icca10ids-mannheim.de
Meeting URL: http://www.icca10.org/index_1.html

Linguistic Field(s): Discourse Analysis

Meeting Description:

ICCA10 is an international multidisciplinary meeting on conversation analysis,
which focuses on talk-in-interaction in everyday conversation, institutional and
mediated interaction.

All interested scholars are cordially invited to participate in ICCA10, to be
organized in Mannheim (Germany), July 4-8, 2010.

ICCA10 brings together researchers of language, culture, and society from
different parts of the world. It aims at sharing the latest research, promoting
co-operation among researchers, and discussing new openings in the quickly
developing field of studies in conversation analysis. Previous conferences took
place in Copenhagen (DK) in 2002 and in Helsinki (FIN) in 2006.


The Conference Theme: Multimodal Interaction
The development of the technology of video-recording has paved the way for a
comprehensive naturalistic study of social interaction as multimodal
interaction. Conversation analysis has started to extend its methodology of
close sequential analysis of talk-in-interaction to the organization of bodily
interaction in its full audio-visual detail. In addition to the sequential
structures of (verbal) interaction, the simultaneity of different modalities of
interaction (speech, gaze, gesture, facial expression, manipulation of objects,
etc.), their fine-grained, interactive co-ordination, and their
context-sensitive deployment have become a new focus of studies. A growing body
of research has produced insights into practices of multimodal interaction in
conversational, institutional, and media contexts, discovering new phenomena and
shedding new light on classic topics of conversation analysis.
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