1. Joint planning in conversations with a person with aphasia
- Author
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Helene Killmer, Jan L. Svennevig, and Suzanne Beeke
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Deontic logic ,Entitlement ,Public relations ,Language and Linguistics ,Negotiation ,Conversation analysis ,Artificial Intelligence ,Aphasia ,VDP::Humanities: 000::Linguistics: 010 ,Agency (sociology) ,medicine ,Wife ,Conversation ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
This study explores practices employed by a person with aphasia (PWA) and his wife to organize joint planning sequences and negotiate deontic rights (a participants' entitlement to initiate planning sequences and the entitlement to accept or reject a plan). We analyze two different conversations between a man with aphasia and his wife and their adult daughter. Using Conversation Analysis (CA), we identify practices that further the PWA's participation in the interaction while planning afternoon activities together with his wife. The PWA contributes to the planning talk by initiating and modifying planning sequences. The spouse supports his participation by aligning with his initiated actions and inviting him to collaborate in planning talk she initiates. Deontic authority is shared between the conversation partners and the PWA's agency is facilitated even during disagreement. The analysis offers insight into practices that allow a PWA to use his limited communicative resources to contribute competently to planning talk.
- Published
- 2021