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Categories-on-the-fly and their uses in interaction
Date : 14 December 2012
Time : 4:30pm -- 6:30pm
Venue : B7603, 7/F Lift 3, Blue Zone, Academic 1, City University of Hong Kong
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Abstract
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'Identity' commonly understood tends to refer to such relatively 'permanent' categories as
nationality,
culture (typically national-culture), geographical or regional origin, occupation, roles in the
family, age, gender, and is usually used – by the researcher – as a variable to explain human
behaviour. These more-or-less 'permanent' identities also tend to come with ready-made labels:
Chinese, American, Singaporean, dad, adolescents, women. But identities need not be 'permanent'
(whatever that means) or ready-made. They can be, and often are, 'occasioned', i.e., invoked or made
on the spot to fit an occasion, and used to serve specific purposes in a particular moment in an
interaction. In this presentation, I will show some examples, from a corpus of naturally occurring
talk, of 'categories-on-the-fly' and illustrate their varied uses as an interactional
resource.
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Bio-sketch
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Professor LUKE Kang Kwong
is Professor of Linguistics at Nanyang Technological University,
Singapore.
Prior to joining Nanyang he was Professor of Linguistics at the University of Hong Kong, and Head of
the Department of Linguistics from 1997 to 2006. His research is in the areas of Chinese Linguistics
and Conversation Analysis. He has worked on Cantonese phonology and grammar and the interface between
language, cognition, and interaction using Chinese and English data. Among his more well-known
publications are Utterance Particles in Cantonese Conversation, Language and Society in Hong Kong, and
Telephone Calls: Unity and Diversity in the Structure of Telephone Conversations across Languages and
Cultures. His latest publication is a special issue for Discourse Processes on 'Turns and Increments'
which he co-edited with Sandra Thompson and Tsuyoshi Ono.
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