Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
933004 Journal of Pragmatics 2011 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

This article examines the negotiation of face in post observation feedback conferences on an initial teacher training programme. The conferences were held in groups with one trainer and up to four trainees and followed a set of generic norms. These norms include the right to offer advice and to criticise, speech acts which are often considered to be face threatening in more normal contexts. However, as the data analysis shows, participants also interact in ways that challenge the generic norms, some of which might be considered more conventionally face attacking. The article argues that face should be analysed at the level of interaction (Haugh and Bargiela-Chiappini, 2010) and that situated and contextual detail is relevant to its analysis. It suggests that linguistic ethnography, which ‘marries’ (Wetherell, 2007) linguistics and ethnography, provides a useful theoretical framework for doing so. To this end the study draws on real-life talk-in-interaction (from transcribed recordings), the participants’ perspectives (from focus groups and interviews) and situated detail (from fieldnotes) to produce a contextualised and nuanced analysis.

► A linguistic ethnographic analysis of face in teacher training feedback conferences. ► Participants follow generic norms of interaction which can include face threatening acts. ► Some face threatening acts can trouble the generic norms and can be considered face attacking. ► Nuanced analyses of face threatening acts require researchers to draw on linguistic and ethnographic data.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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