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Co-constructing identities in speeches: how the construction of an 'other' identity is defining for the 'self' identity and vice versa

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

This paper investigates the way speakers construct their identities as representatives of their companies (institutional identity construction) in relation to the way they "project" an identity onto their audiences. The audience is "altercasted" (Weinstein and Deutschberger 1963) in the role of potential buyer of a product, thus evoking the standardized relational pair (Sacks 1972) of seller/buyer. The speaker then presents his company in the complementary role of seller of a product and as such a link is established between the identities of the speaker's company and the audience. This discursive co-construction of identities is crucial for the way both identities receive meaning. The two cases that are discussed here on the one hand show similarities in the general pattern of the two identity constructions and the way they are interwoven with one another, but on the other hand also demonstrate that there are many unique and diverging ways of constructing and linking these identities.
Journal: Pragmatics
ISSN: 1018-2101
Issue: 3
Volume: 18
Pages: 491 - 509
Publication year:2008
IOF-keylabel:yes
BOF-publication weight:1
CSS-citation score:1
Authors from:Higher Education