Analysing Casual Conversation develops a systematic model for the
analysis and description of casual conversation in English. Working
through authentic examples of casual conversations involving
participants differing in age, gender, ethnicity and socio-economic
class, the authors argue that despite its sometimes aimless appearance
and apparently unstructured content, casual conversation is a highly
structured activity and plays a critical role in the social construction
of reality. Drawing on insights from sociology, linguistics and critical
semiotics, the book equips readers with the analytic skills to describe
the layers of structure and critical interpretive frameworks to explain
the 'social work' that goes on through chat.