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4 - Asking for a Cheese: The Calibration of Looking and Knowing

from Part II - Looking and Knowing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2021

Lorenza Mondada
Affiliation:
Universität Basel, Switzerland
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Summary

An alternative way of initiating the purchase consists for the customer in requesting a specific product. The way requests are formatted, and the way they are produced by looking and possibly pointing at the products, displays whether the customer is a connoisseur or a novice, and project the relevant service expected. The seller provides for a differentiated response to requests displaying more or less knowledge of the requested product. Whereas customers knowing what they request just name the product and are fetched with it, customers not fully knowing what they request are responded to in a more expanded way by the seller. The seller engages in informing – providing a diversity of verbal information about the cheese, within an expert and relatively standardized discourse –  and in showing the product, associating visual characteristics with verbal descriptions. When this is considered by the participants as an insufficient basis for decision-making, the seller offers them to taste the cheese. In this way, the access to the materiality of cheese is provided, depending on the sequential unfolding of the interaction, in a stepwise way ordering vision, talk, and closer sensorial approaches, like touch, smell, and taste.

Type
Chapter
Information
Sensing in Social Interaction
The Taste for Cheese in Gourmet Shops
, pp. 169 - 222
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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