As stated in the Introduction, this edited volume aims to achieve two
overlapping goals: to celebrate the diverse set of research falling
under the label “language and social interaction” (LSI),
and to honor the work and teachings of Robert Hopper, who died in 1998.
Toward the first goal, the book begins, following the Introduction,
with 32 original essays divided into 4 parts: “Orienting to the
field of language and social interaction,” “Talk in
everyday life,” “Talk in institutional settings,” and
“Emerging trajectories: Body, mind, and spirit.” The
contributors are largely researchers well known for their work in the
area of conversation analysis (CA), including Emanuel Schegloff, Gail
Jefferson, Paul Drew, John Heritage, Anita Pomerantz, Chuck Goodwin,
and Gene Lerner, but the articles also cross disciplinary borders to
incorporate research on cognitive processing, gesture, speech
evaluations, sociolinguistic variables (e.g., gender), and ethnography.
To meet the second goal, the volume not only brings together a mixture
of Hopper's former students and colleagues, but it also ends with
a fifth part, titled “Robert Hopper: Teacher and scholar,”
which is devoted to more personal messages about Hopper and his work,
including a final chapter with his acceptance speech for the National
Communication Association mentorship award. This last section of the
book brings the total number of chapters to 39 and the number of pages
to more than 600 (including the Index).