Early Social Interaction: A Case Comparison of Developmental Pragmatics and Psychoanalytic Theory

Cambridge University Press
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9781107622753
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ISBN13:
9781107622753
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When a young child begins to engage in everyday interaction, she has to acquire competencies that allow her to be oriented to the conventions that inform talk-in-interaction and, at the same time, deal with emotional or affective dimensions of experience. The theoretical positions associated with these domains - social-action and emotion - provide very different accounts of human development and this book examines why this is the case. Through a longitudinal video-recorded study of one child learning how to talk, Michael A. Forrester develops proposals that rest upon a comparison of two perspectives on everyday parent-child interaction taken from the same data corpus - one informed by conversation analysis and ethnomethodology, the other by psychoanalytic developmental psychology. Ultimately, what is significant for attaining membership within any culture is gradually being able to display an orientation towards both domains - doing and feeling, or social-action and affect.


  • | Author: Michael A. Forrester
  • | Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • | Publication Date: Jan 12, 2016
  • | Number of Pages: 304 pages
  • | Language: English
  • | Binding: Paperback/Psychology
  • | ISBN-10: 1107622751
  • | ISBN-13: 9781107622753
Author:
Michael A. Forrester
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Publication Date:
Jan 12, 2016
Number of pages:
304 pages
Language:
English
Binding:
Paperback/Psychology
ISBN-10:
1107622751
ISBN-13:
9781107622753