Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Contributors
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Points of Departure
- Part III Collections
- Part IV Evidence
- Part V Avenues into Action
- Part VI Situating and Reporting Findings
- 31 Conversation Analysis across Disciplines: Connecting and Engaging through Publishing
- 32 What Do Journal Editors Look for in Publishing Conversation-Analytic Work?
- 33 Communicating Findings to Non-CA Professionals
- Part VII Looking Forward
- Appendix I Jeffersonian Transcription Conventions
- Appendix II Multimodal Transcription Conventions
- Index
31 - Conversation Analysis across Disciplines: Connecting and Engaging through Publishing
from Part VI - Situating and Reporting Findings
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 December 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Contributors
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Points of Departure
- Part III Collections
- Part IV Evidence
- Part V Avenues into Action
- Part VI Situating and Reporting Findings
- 31 Conversation Analysis across Disciplines: Connecting and Engaging through Publishing
- 32 What Do Journal Editors Look for in Publishing Conversation-Analytic Work?
- 33 Communicating Findings to Non-CA Professionals
- Part VII Looking Forward
- Appendix I Jeffersonian Transcription Conventions
- Appendix II Multimodal Transcription Conventions
- Index
Summary
A significant part of our work as conversation analysts is to persuade different disciplinary communities of the insights from CA. Here, conversation analysts working within the broader domains of sociology, linguistics, psychology and communication, education, and health services discuss the ways in which our findings may be shaped for publication in journals particular to our own domains, and thereby engage with our wider disciplinary audiences. In the first instance, we situate CA with respect to its development in each of our disciplines and identify the core issues with which CA is engaging. We then examine some of the challenges in presenting CA to our disciplines. These include addressing the question that CA scholars often face from colleagues in those disciplines: ‘Why should this matter to us?’. We finally offer some practical guidance on writing CA for our particular audiences, including: how to manage the length constraints often imposed by journals, the issue of sampling size, and how to balance the demands of transcriptional detail as required by CA with those of clarity and legibility for those not accustomed to it. Such challenges can be highly creative – and worthwhile in showing how CA can enhance received theory in our own disciplines.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Handbook of Methods in Conversation Analysis , pp. 895 - 921Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024