Queuing interaction bodies. Indexicality and (mis)interpretations of bodily-spatial arrangements in spaces of consumption.

Singh, Ajit; Eisewicht, Paul

Forschungsartikel (Buchbeitrag) | Peer reviewed

Zusammenfassung

In this chapter, we address the empirical question of how bodies are interpreted, understood, or even misinterpreted in everyday life and how meaning and social order are produced through embodied forms of action. The prototypical phenomenon of our investigations are visible actions of queuing in front of shops (a bakery at the time of the COVID-19 pandemic), which we situate in the context of consumer action. In a theoretical sense, the interaction body and its situational, indexical, and context-bound “readability” and interpretability become the focus of our consideration. We define the interaction body as a socially enculturated body endowed with knowledge that stands in an indexical and sign-like relation to other bodies, but whose meaningfulness cannot be interpreted separately from its local embedding in spatial, temporal, and material structures. Finally, this chapter emphasises that, while the intelligibility of bodies is tied to situational communicative action, some bodies’ ambiguity poses a problem – not just for the analysing sociologists, but also for the participants who encounter each other in casual or familiar social situations.

Details zur Publikation

Herausgeber*innenSingh, Ajjit; Meier zu Verl, Christian; Tuma, René
BuchtitelVideo-Analysis and Knowledge on Rewind.
Seitenbereich80-97
VerlagRoutledge
ErscheinungsortLondon
StatusVeröffentlicht
Veröffentlichungsjahr2025 (01.08.2025)
Sprache, in der die Publikation verfasst istEnglisch
ISBN9781003279259
DOI10.4324/9781003279259
Link zum Volltexthttps://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9781003279259-7/queuing-interaction-bodies-ajit-singh-paul-eisewicht?context=ubx&refId=d8c54036-7af3-497e-a268-a98eafc4359b
StichwörterKonsum; Corona; Pandemie; Warteschlangen; Videographie

Autor*innen der Universität Münster

Eisewicht, Paul
Institut für Soziologie (IfS)