Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Don H. Zimmerman , G. Raymond , Dirk Meyer
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of California, Santa Barbara, USA, University of California, Santa Barbara
ANO 2012
TIPO Book
CITAÇÕES 12
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 001a7f51a4120af18733ba2dd7c7b167
MD5 58bd8d67e5a37bb31a34d7561697fc15

Resumo

Using data from American emergency call centers, this article focuses on the coordination, and mutual relevance, of participants' effort to manage two forms of unit completion – sequence closing (as a method for 'project' completion) and concluding the occasion in which the project was pursued. In doing so, we specify the import of sequence organization as one method for conducting, organizing, and resolving interactional projects participants may be said to pursue, and describe (1) a range of possible relations between project completion and occasion closure and (2) the locations from which problems come to be introduced as parties move to resolve projects and close calls. As we show, sequence and occasion closings produced in the service of projects are fateful: they inexorably demand that the participants arrive at some alignment – or make visible their failure to do so – regarding the projects pursued in it, the status of those projects, and thus who, as a consequence, the parties are (or could have been) for another, that is, their 'identities'. For strangers and familiars both, the management of projects and the manner in which closing is achieved matters.

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