Multimodal dairy cow–human interaction in an intensive farming context

Leonie Cornips, Marjo van Koppen*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

In our consideration of how to decentre an anthropocentric view in linguistics, we will address the following research question: how do dairy cows and humans imbue their interspecies interaction as a semiotic resource with meaning that makes sense for both species under specific social conditions (Jørgensen, 2008:167). We address the question by using a social-interactional approach informed by conversation analysis (CA) (Goodwin, 2017, Mondada, 2016, 2018; Mondémé, 2021), which enables us to examine what the dairy cow makes relevant in the sequential organisation when interacting with a human. We show that the dairy cows make gaze important in their interaction. Gaze alone is sufficient to mobilize human interlocutor response, and gaze withdrawal by the human should take place for a successful communication (case-study 1 versus study 2). The case-studies of dairy cow–human interactions show that these interactions include much more than (human) sounds and (human) signs only: language is taken as languaging, as a social practice, embedded in a multimodal interactional exchange (Levinson and Holler 2014) that includes nonhuman animals as well. This also implies that linguists should therefore look beyond ‘sound’ and ‘sign’.
Original languageEnglish
Article number101587
Number of pages14
JournalLanguage Sciences
Volume101
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2024

Keywords

  • Animal turn in linguistics
  • Conversation analysis
  • Cow-human interaction
  • Embodied language
  • Gaze and turn taking
  • Interspecies ethnography

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