HenryCase wrote:
Perhaps "small talk" needs a clearer definition. Is "small talk" meaningless conversation or all non-practical conversation?
Oops, I appear to have contradicted myself. Ok, I'm going to have to get a bit more technical. Roth & Spekman describe communicative intentions, which can be loosely defined as verbal actions such as requesting, rejecting, drawing attention, answering etc. I'm not really interested in these behaviours since they are usually designed to achieve some specific purpose, like asking "Where's the dog?" or telling someone "Stop that". I'm interested more in the conversation which occurs for no pre-defined purpose other than for the sake of talking. This could be defined as small-talk I suppose.
Hope that clears up my earlier contradiction :-)
HenryCase wrote:
What if that 'find something more personal' point didn't arrive? Would the "small talk" journey still be worthwhile if it didn't have a deeper conversation conclusion?
Well there's obviously no right or wrong answer to that. Personally, if I don't have some goal in mind when speaking to somebody and if I don't find anything to talk to them about other than mundane chit-chat like the weather then I usually attempt to politely end the interaction as rapidly as possible.
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moto