The social and moral work of modal constructions in granting remote requests

Jakob Steensig, Trine Heinemann

Research output: Contribution to book/anthology/report/proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Previous research has established that participants in interaction distinguish between those requests that can be satisfied immediately and those that are to be satisfied at some point in the future. Whereas immediate requests can be granted simply by the recipient carrying out the requested action, the preferred and aligning response to a remote request is a full-clause response with which the recipient commits to carry out the requested action in the future. This paper investigates the most frequently occurring forms of full-clause, complying responses to remote requests in Danish interactions. We show that those full-clause responses that contain a modal adverb differ in interactional relevant ways from those full-clause responses that do not contain a modal adverb. Full-clause responses without a modal adverb are treated by participants as indicating that the relevance of carrying out the requested action is a given and as such something that both requester and recipient understand as an appropriate action. Full-clause responses with modal adverbs, by contrast, are employed to indicate that the requested action is not recognizably appropriate to the recipient, but will be carried out specifically because it was requested.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationRequesting in Social Interaction
EditorsPaul Drew, Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen
Number of pages36
Place of publicationAmsterdam
PublisherJohn Benjamins Publishing Company
Publication date2014
Pages145-170
Publication statusPublished - 2014
SeriesStudies in Language and Social Interaction
ISSN1879-3983

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