Summary: | People make reference to places in the variable formulations afforded by their languages and
to multiple ends that in addition to picking out a referent, simultaneously build conceptual common
ground about seen and unseen landscapes, including moral stances about the social geography. This paper
examines the different ways that Lachixío Zapotec speakers of Oaxaca, Mexico, formulate and interpret
place references in the dialogic narratives of their conversations. I examine sequences of interaction within
stories that emerged in conversations as joint social actions. These sequences include both speakers’
place formulations and addressees’ responses that publically display their uptake and stances toward
the references. I describe resources of the Lachixío Zapotec language for referencing place and show how
place references are entangled with person references, references to historical events, and participants’
moral stances toward such references. Through examining references to locations within sequences of
conversational story telling we gather some evidence for how conceptual common ground and moral value
is developed through the step-wise progression of turn-taking and how stances about places come to be
culturally shared or contested between interlocutors dialogically.
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