This book investigates interaction-focused scholarship on online communication. It focuses on a broad range of online contexts including social media, dating apps, online comments, instant messaging and video-mediated interaction. Bringing together experts from a variety of scholarly backgrounds, chapters demonstrate how different microanalytic methods, including conversation analysis, membership categorization analysis and discursive psychology, can be applied to online communication. The book also goes on to address ethical, methodological and theoretical issues of analysing online social interaction.
With the explosion of the use of online platforms for everyday and institutional interaction, this book is a timely collection which explores the current state of the field, and considers future directions for microanalysis of online communication.
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Ethical challenges in collecting and analysing online interactions
Context, history and Twitter data: Some methdological reflections
"It's time to shift this blog a bit": Categorial negotiation as a local and cumulative accomplishment
The radio host cried, the Facebook users identified: Crying as an action linked to 'good people'
"On that note I'm signing out": Endings of threads in online newspaper comments
Participation of companions in video-mediated medical consultations: A microanalysis