Abstract

This conversation-analytic paper investigates the multimodal design and interactional functions of the connective et puis après (‘and then after that’) in a French-language corpus of video-recorded collaborative storytellings. Two similar, yet different, sequential positions are investigated: the juncture between subsequent story episodes and the space between extended side sequences and the return to the story-in-progress. Such juncture positions constitute recognizable moments at which both members of the telling party, i. e., the current teller and the co-teller, must determine the topic of the next story episode as well as its delivery. Thus, juncture positions provide a perspicuous setting for the analysis of how tellership is negotiated and how topic progression is achieved. The connective et puis après appears to be a resource for current tellers to establish spaces for coparticipation at juncture positions, closing prior talk and projecting continuation. The multimodal analysis shows that both its prosodic design and co-occurring changes of the embodied participation framework contribute to opening interactive turn spaces and to making telling-specific next actions relevant.

Highlights

  • When two or more people jointly tell a story in conversation, they are faced with a number of practical problems: they need to decide who tells what part of the story and how to deliver the telling for its recipients (Sacks 1992: 437; Mandelbaum 1987)

  • Linguistik online 112, 7/21 one linguistic resource and its multimodal design are investigated: the connective et puis après (‘and after that’). This conversation-analytic study examines the multimodal design and interactional functions of et puis après in a French-language corpus of video-recorded stories told by couples or close friends who share knowledge about the source events

  • Et puis après appears to be a resource for tellers to establish spaces for coparticipation at juncture positions, closing prior talk and projecting continuation

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Summary

Introduction

When two or more people jointly tell a story in conversation, they are faced with a number of practical problems: they need to decide who tells what part of the story and how to deliver the telling for its recipients (Sacks 1992: 437; Mandelbaum 1987). This paper identifies two sequential places at which such negotiations become relevant: between subsequent story episodes and upon completion of extended side sequences. Such juncture positions constitute recognizable moments at which both members of the telling party must determine the topic of the story episode as well as its delivery. Linguistik online 112, 7/21 one linguistic resource and its multimodal design are investigated: the connective et puis après (‘and after that’).

Collaborative storytelling
Multimodal practices of turn organization
Sequential and structural aspects of extended tellings
Data and method
Soliciting co-teller continuation between story episodes
Closing side sequences and projecting story resumption
Co-teller topic prompt
Going back to a previous story episode
Results and Conclusion
Full Text
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