Abstract

This study examines the situated use of rules and the social practices people deploy to correct projectable rule violations in pétanque playing activities. Drawing on Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis, and using naturally occurring video recordings, this article investigates socially organized occasions of rule use, and more particularly how rules for turn-taking at play are reflexively established in and through interaction. The alternation of players in pétanque is dependent on and consequential for the progressivity of the game and it is a practical problem for the players when a participant projects to break a rule of “who plays next”. The empirical analysis shows that formulating rules is a practice for indicating and correcting incipient violations of who plays next, which retrospectively invoke and establish the situated expectations that constitute the game as that particular game. Focusing on the anticipative corrections of projectable violations of turn-taking rules, this study revisits the concept of rules, as they are played into being, from a social and interactional perspective. We argue and demonstrate that rules are not prescriptions of game conduct, but resources that reflexively render the players’ conducts intelligible as playing the game they are engaging in.

Highlights

  • This paper focuses on players’ practices for correcting violations of a basic rule concerning the alternation of players in the game pétanque

  • Basic rules make up the constitutive order of events that provides for the recognizability of a particular activity and share three features: (i) they frame a set of alternatives the player expects to choose from; (ii) the player expects that the same set of alternatives are binding upon other players; (iii) the player expects that other players expect from her what she expects from them (1963: 190)

  • This paper demonstrates that the participants of the game playing activity treat the normative aspects and orders of the game as being embedded in the know-how of playing

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Summary

Introduction

This paper focuses on players’ practices for correcting violations of a basic rule concerning the alternation of players in the game pétanque. In difference from work conceiving rules as external regulations that are followed and pre-determine social conduct, this study is situated within an approach treating rules as normative orders

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