This article examines some issues facing the fieldworker attempting to
observe and record “natural” conversations, and it reconsiders
the long-held sociolinguistic notion of the observer's paradox by
recasting it within Allan Bell's framework of audience design theory.
Style shifting in observed and recorded speech events is seen to be
influenced by speakers' perception of the fieldworker's social
role, and by the fieldworker's participant role in the speech
event.An earlier and much briefer version
of this article was presented at the 2002 Berkeley Linguistics Society
conference. I am most grateful to Barbara Johnstone, Jane Hill, and two
anonymous reviewers for their insightful and helpful comments. Funding for
this fieldwork was provided by grants from the International Research and
Exchange Board, the Academy for Educational Development, and the Berkeley
Program in Post-Soviet Studies.