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Human sociality in the times of the Covid‐19 pandemic: A systematic examination of change in greetings
Author(s) -
Mondada Lorenza,
Bänninger Julia,
Bouaouina Sofian A.,
Camus Laurent,
Gauthier Guillaume,
Hänggi Philipp,
Koda Mizuki,
Svensson Hanna,
Tekin Burak S.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of sociolinguistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1467-9841
pISSN - 1360-6441
DOI - 10.1111/josl.12433
Subject(s) - sociality , embodied cognition , normative , sociology , pandemic , psychology , action (physics) , german , covid-19 , social psychology , linguistics , epistemology , medicine , ecology , philosophy , physics , disease , pathology , quantum mechanics , infectious disease (medical specialty) , biology
Using multimodal conversation analysis this article examines embodied and tactile greetings in social interaction, documenting their change during the Covid‐19 pandemic. Recognizing social interaction as foundational for human sociality, we consider greetings as a crucial normative, organizational, and ritual practice for mutually engaging in intersubjective action. Analyses use video recordings made in Switzerland (featuring (Swiss‐)German and English as a lingua‐franca), focusing on embodied greetings of acquainted people in public spaces at the age of Covid19—a historical moment in which physical proximity and contact are targeted by official measures restricting social interactions. Studying a range of tactile embodied greetings, the paper shows how they change from routine greetings to hesitated, suspended yet still completed ones, and to projected but resisted and refused ones. Furthermore, it reveals some ‘new’ practices of greeting (elbow/feetbumps, hugs‐in‐the‐air) and their non‐straightforward and accountable character, as well as how they sediment and normalize during the pandemic.

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