Family as Context

Within the last decade, discourse analysts have delved into the private sphere to examine the institution of the family. Analysts have noted how the family is a fertile research site and how investigation of family interaction gives, among other things, crucial insight into the intricate relational...

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Main Authors: Rebekah Johnson, Donna DelPrete
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Columbia University Libraries 2015-06-01
Series:Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL
Subjects:
Online Access:https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/d8-j5d8-2009/download
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author Rebekah Johnson
Donna DelPrete
author_facet Rebekah Johnson
Donna DelPrete
author_sort Rebekah Johnson
collection DOAJ
description Within the last decade, discourse analysts have delved into the private sphere to examine the institution of the family. Analysts have noted how the family is a fertile research site and how investigation of family interaction gives, among other things, crucial insight into the intricate relational struggles between parents and their children (e.g., Dedaic, 2001; Sarangi, 2006; Tannen, Kendall, & Gordon, 2007). Considered a micro institution, the family provides the dayto-day context in which relations of power and connection are enacted, and human bonds are either severed or forged. In this respect, it is a key social institution, one “that mediates the individual and the social, with identifiable structures, functions, and hierarchies” (Sarangi, 2006, p. 403). Within this context, individuals also share a history, having been engaged with one another for a relatively long period of time. As a result of this long and extended contact, interaction among family members runs a gamut of emotions and behaviors. There are moments of tension and tenderness, assertions of autonomy and acts of resistance, and attempts by children to individuate from parents while still retaining some interpersonal attachment to the family as a whole. A discursive analysis of family interaction can provide insight into how family members negotiate these behaviors and attempt to maintain some familial harmony. Despite a concerted effort to “keep the peace,” any seemingly innocuous remark, request, or rumination by one family member (typically a parent) may evoke a past event or action that another family member (often a child) wishes to keep in the hinterland of his/her mind. The (re)linking of this prior interaction to the present context—known as intertextuality (c.f. Gordon, 2009)—also offers an opportunity to relive any feelings or tensions that may have accompanied it the first time. Hence, a family’s prior interaction clearly (re)shapes and (re)contextualizes their present interaction.
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spelling doaj.art-5c9fe9cbaac949f19c6f23c2f14535b52022-12-21T21:51:50ZengColumbia University LibrariesWorking Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL2576-29072576-29072015-06-011015254https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-z4rn-wz78Family as ContextRebekah JohnsonDonna DelPreteWithin the last decade, discourse analysts have delved into the private sphere to examine the institution of the family. Analysts have noted how the family is a fertile research site and how investigation of family interaction gives, among other things, crucial insight into the intricate relational struggles between parents and their children (e.g., Dedaic, 2001; Sarangi, 2006; Tannen, Kendall, & Gordon, 2007). Considered a micro institution, the family provides the dayto-day context in which relations of power and connection are enacted, and human bonds are either severed or forged. In this respect, it is a key social institution, one “that mediates the individual and the social, with identifiable structures, functions, and hierarchies” (Sarangi, 2006, p. 403). Within this context, individuals also share a history, having been engaged with one another for a relatively long period of time. As a result of this long and extended contact, interaction among family members runs a gamut of emotions and behaviors. There are moments of tension and tenderness, assertions of autonomy and acts of resistance, and attempts by children to individuate from parents while still retaining some interpersonal attachment to the family as a whole. A discursive analysis of family interaction can provide insight into how family members negotiate these behaviors and attempt to maintain some familial harmony. Despite a concerted effort to “keep the peace,” any seemingly innocuous remark, request, or rumination by one family member (typically a parent) may evoke a past event or action that another family member (often a child) wishes to keep in the hinterland of his/her mind. The (re)linking of this prior interaction to the present context—known as intertextuality (c.f. Gordon, 2009)—also offers an opportunity to relive any feelings or tensions that may have accompanied it the first time. Hence, a family’s prior interaction clearly (re)shapes and (re)contextualizes their present interaction.https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/d8-j5d8-2009/downloadApplied linguisticsContext (linguistics)FamiliesDiscourse analysisFamily unitsFamily interaction
spellingShingle Rebekah Johnson
Donna DelPrete
Family as Context
Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL
Applied linguistics
Context (linguistics)
Families
Discourse analysis
Family units
Family interaction
title Family as Context
title_full Family as Context
title_fullStr Family as Context
title_full_unstemmed Family as Context
title_short Family as Context
title_sort family as context
topic Applied linguistics
Context (linguistics)
Families
Discourse analysis
Family units
Family interaction
url https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/d8-j5d8-2009/download
work_keys_str_mv AT rebekahjohnson familyascontext
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