Servicing the body: placing glasses on the client’s head at the opticians

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Servicing the body: placing glasses on the client’s head at the opticians. / Due, Brian Lystgaard; von Lehn, Dirk; Webb, Helena; Heath, Christian ; Trærup, Johan.

I: Visual Studies, 2020, s. 1-15.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Due, BL, von Lehn, D, Webb, H, Heath, C & Trærup, J 2020, 'Servicing the body: placing glasses on the client’s head at the opticians', Visual Studies, s. 1-15. https://doi.org/10.1080/1472586X.2020.1763196?journalCode=rvst20

APA

Due, B. L., von Lehn, D., Webb, H., Heath, C., & Trærup, J. (2020). Servicing the body: placing glasses on the client’s head at the opticians. Visual Studies, 1-15. https://doi.org/10.1080/1472586X.2020.1763196?journalCode=rvst20

Vancouver

Due BL, von Lehn D, Webb H, Heath C, Trærup J. Servicing the body: placing glasses on the client’s head at the opticians. Visual Studies. 2020;1-15. https://doi.org/10.1080/1472586X.2020.1763196?journalCode=rvst20

Author

Due, Brian Lystgaard ; von Lehn, Dirk ; Webb, Helena ; Heath, Christian ; Trærup, Johan. / Servicing the body: placing glasses on the client’s head at the opticians. I: Visual Studies. 2020 ; s. 1-15.

Bibtex

@article{00d07620ee604615abed55374fbff7e8,
title = "Servicing the body:: placing glasses on the client{\textquoteright}s head at the opticians",
abstract = "Various forms of service work rely upon personnel undertaking activities that necessitate close, and in some cases potentially intimate, contact with a client{\textquoteright}s body. In this paper, we consider the ways in which opticians place and position glasses on the head of their clients and how they avoid, or at least ameliorate, the problems and sensitivities that might arise in this close encounter with the co-participant. The paper is based on the analysis of a substantial corpus of video-recordings, augmented by field work, undertaken both in UK and Denmark. The analysis draws on ethnomethodology and conversation analysis and contributes to our understanding of the interactional accomplishment of body work and embodied conduct and to the growing corpus of research concerned with {\textquoteleft}multimodality{\textquoteright} and the social organisation of service encounters.",
author = "Due, {Brian Lystgaard} and {von Lehn}, Dirk and Helena Webb and Christian Heath and Johan Tr{\ae}rup",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1080/1472586X.2020.1763196?journalCode=rvst20",
language = "English",
pages = "1--15",
journal = "Visual Studies",
issn = "1472-586X",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Servicing the body:

T2 - placing glasses on the client’s head at the opticians

AU - Due, Brian Lystgaard

AU - von Lehn, Dirk

AU - Webb, Helena

AU - Heath, Christian

AU - Trærup, Johan

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Various forms of service work rely upon personnel undertaking activities that necessitate close, and in some cases potentially intimate, contact with a client’s body. In this paper, we consider the ways in which opticians place and position glasses on the head of their clients and how they avoid, or at least ameliorate, the problems and sensitivities that might arise in this close encounter with the co-participant. The paper is based on the analysis of a substantial corpus of video-recordings, augmented by field work, undertaken both in UK and Denmark. The analysis draws on ethnomethodology and conversation analysis and contributes to our understanding of the interactional accomplishment of body work and embodied conduct and to the growing corpus of research concerned with ‘multimodality’ and the social organisation of service encounters.

AB - Various forms of service work rely upon personnel undertaking activities that necessitate close, and in some cases potentially intimate, contact with a client’s body. In this paper, we consider the ways in which opticians place and position glasses on the head of their clients and how they avoid, or at least ameliorate, the problems and sensitivities that might arise in this close encounter with the co-participant. The paper is based on the analysis of a substantial corpus of video-recordings, augmented by field work, undertaken both in UK and Denmark. The analysis draws on ethnomethodology and conversation analysis and contributes to our understanding of the interactional accomplishment of body work and embodied conduct and to the growing corpus of research concerned with ‘multimodality’ and the social organisation of service encounters.

U2 - 10.1080/1472586X.2020.1763196?journalCode=rvst20

DO - 10.1080/1472586X.2020.1763196?journalCode=rvst20

M3 - Journal article

SP - 1

EP - 15

JO - Visual Studies

JF - Visual Studies

SN - 1472-586X

ER -

ID: 245632952