“Oh my god that would hurt”: Pain cries in feminist self-defence classes

IF 1.3 2区 文学 Q2 COMMUNICATION Language & Communication Pub Date : 2023-05-01 DOI:10.1016/j.langcom.2023.01.004
Ann Weatherall
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This study examines response cries produced by student spectators reacting to imagined pain in the setting of feminist self-defence classes. It investigates the vocal, verbal and embodied resources that constitute reactive displays to demonstrations and descriptions of physical techniques that can thwart attacks. It asks what the pain cries accomplish, considering their form and sequential organisation. Video-recordings of the classes were data. Drawing on discursive psychology and using multi-modal conversation analysis, the results detail how the conventionalised composition and positions of the cries make them mutually intelligible as reacting to a painful experience. They functioned to support the progression of the instructional activity that created a make-believe space where girls and women can resist violence. The findings confirm and extend what is known about the interactional environments and activities in which pain figures, further advancing the distinctive insights that an interactional approach brings. Data are in New Zealand English.

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“天哪,那会很疼”:女权主义自卫课上的痛苦呐喊
这项研究考察了在女权主义自卫课的背景下,学生观众对想象中的疼痛做出反应时发出的回应叫声。它调查了声音、语言和具体资源,这些资源构成了对可以挫败攻击的物理技术的演示和描述的反应性展示。考虑到疼痛哭喊的形式和顺序组织,它询问疼痛哭喊实现了什么。课堂的录像就是数据。研究结果借鉴了话语心理学,并使用多模态对话分析,详细说明了哭声的传统组成和位置如何使它们在对痛苦经历的反应中相互理解。它们的作用是支持教学活动的进展,创造了一个女孩和妇女可以抵抗暴力的虚构空间。这些发现证实并扩展了人们对疼痛发生的互动环境和活动的了解,进一步推进了互动方法带来的独特见解。数据采用新西兰英语。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
6.70%
发文量
67
期刊介绍: This journal is unique in that it provides a forum devoted to the interdisciplinary study of language and communication. The investigation of language and its communicational functions is treated as a concern shared in common by those working in applied linguistics, child development, cultural studies, discourse analysis, intellectual history, legal studies, language evolution, linguistic anthropology, linguistics, philosophy, the politics of language, pragmatics, psychology, rhetoric, semiotics, and sociolinguistics. The journal invites contributions which explore the implications of current research for establishing common theoretical frameworks within which findings from different areas of study may be accommodated and interrelated. By focusing attention on the many ways in which language is integrated with other forms of communicational activity and interactional behaviour, it is intended to encourage approaches to the study of language and communication which are not restricted by existing disciplinary boundaries.
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