Navigating Friendships in Interaction: Discursive and Ethnographic Perspectives

Front Cover
Cade Bushnell, Stephen J. Moody
Taylor & Francis, Dec 14, 2023 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 280 pages

Bushnell and Moody present a rich investigation into the navigation of friendships, adopting discursive and ethnographic perspectives to examine Japanese, Chinese, Korean, and English interactional data.

Since the definition of friendship is hard to pin down, most sociocultural anthropologists have tended to focus on issues of kinship and descent, while leaving friendship as a residual or interstitial issue. However, this book puts friendship as the central focus and offers unique perspectives from the participants themselves. The interactional work implicated in the accomplishment of making and being friends, and the trials and tribulations of friendship, are both explored through the many detailed analyses showing how the participants navigate the calm and rough waters of friendship in and through their everyday interactions.

Researchers, undergraduates, and postgraduate students in the fields of conversation analysis, pragmatics, and other social sciences will benefit from the real-life examples in the book as well as the analysis.

Contents

A microethnography of not making friends in firsttime
3
Categorizing novice and expert
4
Joking practices with deviant Japanese among
19
An investigation into pointinginitiated
2
Rhythmic synchrony through mutual reactions
1
Displays of disaffiliation in friends
24
Ijiri as a poetic ritual of bonding among Japanese college soccer club members
39
Maintaining an intimate relationship after face threatening
Toward integrating discursive approaches
Index
Copyright

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About the author (2023)

Cade Bushnell is an Associate Professor of International and Advanced Japanese Studies at the University of Tsukuba, Japan. He has a PhD in East Asian languages and literatures (Japanese linguistics) from the University of Hawai‘i.

Stephen J. Moody is an Associate Professor of Asian and Near Eastern Languages at Brigham Young University, Utah. He has a PhD in East Asian languages and literatures from the University of Hawai‘i.