Publication | Closed Access
Disagreement and concession in disputes: On the context sensitivity of preference structures
334
Citations
14
References
1993
Year
NegotiationContext SensitivityTurn-takingNegotiation TheoryArgumentation AnalysisLawPolitical BehaviorCollective ChoiceDisagreement SequencesReluctance MarkersDiscourse AnalysisConversation AnalysisLanguage StudiesLinguisticsArgumentation FrameworkPreference StructuresInterpersonal PragmaticJudgement AggregationPersuasion
ABSTRACT This article discusses disagreement sequences in German and Anglo-American disputes. It is argued that the context sensitivity of preference for agreement with assessments that Pomerantz 1984 found in her data has to be elaborated and extended. My findings suggest that the preference structure can change once a dissent-turn-sequence has been displayed; in this case, opponents are expected to defend their positions. The reduction of reluctance markers creates a new preference structure which itself has to be accomplished by all participants. Concessions, defined as a participant's agreeing to the central issue after his or her prior disagreement, show reluctance markers which are viewed as indicators of the dispreferred status in other types of talk. Concessions can be distinguished from partially agreeing presequences of dissent turns. Speakers move toward concessions stepwise. Unprepared position shifts can be regarded by the interlocutors as the inability to defend an opinion. Concessions, being an interactional achievement, reframe the dispute. (Conversation analysis, dispute, context studies, expectation management)
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