Gene Lerner (ed.), Conversation analysis: Studies from
the first generation. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 2004. Pp. 300. Hb
$138.00, Pb $65.95.
Conversation analysis developed in the mid to late 1960s in a
collaboration initially between Harvey Sacks and Emanuel Schegloff and,
somewhat later, with the addition of Gail Jefferson. By the early 1970s,
several students joined the group, by this point based at the University
of California campuses at Irvine and Los Angeles, to form what Lerner
calls “the first generation.” Conversation analysis has
continued to grow, indeed has flourished, in the years since. Today
conversation analysts are to be found not only in the United Stated,
Canada, and the United Kingdom, but also Japan, Korea, Germany, Finland,
the Netherlands, and many other countries. There are conversation analysts
in departments of sociology, linguistics, anthropology, communication, and
psychology, as well as in many modern language and applied programs. The
widespread success of conversation analysis is largely attributable to
three characteristics of its research program: