TY - BOOK AU - Arps,Bernard AU - Cole,Debbie AU - De Fina,Anna AU - Errington,Joe AU - Goebel,Zane AU - Hakim,Rafadi AU - Harr,Adam AU - Morin,Izak AU - Moriyama,Mikihiro AU - Noverini Djenar,Dwi AU - Zentz,Lauren TI - Rapport and the Discursive Co-Construction of Social Relations in Fieldwork Encounters T2 - Language and Social Life [LSL] , SN - 9781501516368 AV - GN34.3.F53 U1 - 301.072/3 23 PY - 2019///] CY - Berlin, Boston PB - De Gruyter Mouton KW - Anthropology KW - Fieldwork KW - Ethnology KW - Sociolinguistics KW - Conversation KW - Ethnologie KW - Identität KW - LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General KW - bisacsh KW - Ethnography KW - Identity KW - Relationships N1 - Frontmatter --; Acknowledgment --; Contents --; List of Contributing Authors --; 1. Rapport and the Discursive Co-Construction of Social Relations in Fieldwork Settings --; 2. Looking for Rapport in the Metacommunicative Features of an Ethnographic Interview --; 3. ‘Today’s Episode Is Sponsored by Nü Green Tea’: Rapport and Virtuoso Humour in Group Interviews --; 4. Understanding Rapport Through Scalar Reflexivity --; 5. Doing Ethnography Across Institutions: Rapport and Discursive Ruptures in Jakarta --; 6. Commentary: Rapport in Qualitative Investigation, from Researcher’s Objectivity to Researcher’s Reflexivity --; 7. Sociolinguistic Scale and Ethnographic Rapport --; 8. The Ethnolinguistic Listener: Narrativity and Ideologies of Local Language in Urban Banyuwangi --; 9. The Discursive Co-Construction of Social Relations in Sundanese-Speaking Areas in West Java --; 10. Rapport, Affinity, and Kin Terms --; 11. Recognitional Reference and Rapport Building in the Author Interview --; 12. Making Connections --; Index; restricted access; Issued also in print N2 - In accounts of ethnographic fieldwork and textbooks on ethnography, we often find the notion of rapport used to describe social relationships in the field. Frequently, rapport between researcher and researched is invoked as a prerequisite to be achieved before fieldwork can start, or used as evidence to judge the value and robustness of an ethnography. With few exceptions, and despite regular pleas to do so, ethnographers continue to avoid presenting any discursive evidence of what rapport might look like from an interactional perspective. In a sense, the uncritical acceptance of rapport as a fieldwork goal and measure has helped hide the discursive work that goes on in the field. In turn, this has privileged ideas about identity as portable rather than “portable and emergent”, and reports of social life as more important than how such reports emerge. Written for all those who engage or plan to engage in ethnographic fieldwork, this collection examines how social relationships dialogically emerge in fieldwork settings UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9781501507830 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9781501507830 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9781501507830/original ER -