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Kinship‐based deference among Jaru siblings: A collaborative, adaptive, and multimodal accomplishment

Journal of Linguistic Anthropology

Published online on

Abstract

["Journal of Linguistic Anthropology, Volume 36, Issue 1, May 2026. ", "\nAbstract\nIn the Jaru community of northern Western Australia, certain in‐laws and relatives are categorized as being in a highly respectful relationship in which they are expected to pay deference to one another. This conversation‐analytic study closely examines the deferential practices that are used among three Jaru siblings in an ordinary multi‐party conversation, providing insights into the dynamic and cooperative nature of kin‐based respect and demonstrating that the practices in question readily diverge from metapragmatic stereotypes to fit the interactional context. The deferential practices function as sociopragmatic indexicals that form a multimodal register, encompassing both linguistic and bodily visual resources.\n"]