The Routledge sociolinguistics reader:
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Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
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London [u.a.]
Routledge
2010
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Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXIV, 559 S. graph. Darst., Kt. |
ISBN: | 9780415469562 9780415469579 0415469562 0415469570 |
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adam_text | Titel: The Routledge sociolinguistics reader
Autor: Meyerhoff, Miriam
Jahr: 2010
CONTENTS
List of figures ix
List of tables xiii
User s guide to The Routledge Sociolinguistics Reader xvii
Acknowledgements xxi
INTRODUCTION
1 Erik Schleef and Miriam Meyerhoff 1
SOCIOLINGUISTIC METHODS FOR DATA COLLECTION AND
INTERPRETATION
PART ONE
Identities, Style and Politeness 27
Editors Introduction to Part One 29
2 Allan Bell 32
BACK IN STYLE: REWORKING AUDIENCE DESIGN
3 Jennifer Hay, Stefanie Jannedy, and Norma Mendoza-Denton 53
OPRAH AND /AY/: LEXICAL FREQUENCY, REFEREE DESIGN. AND STYLE
4 Qing Zhang 60
A CHINESE YUPPIE IN BEIJING: PHONOLOGICAL VARIATION AND
THE CONSTRUCTION OF A NEW PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY
5 John Laver 79
LINGUISTIC ROUTINES AND POLITENESS IN GREETING AND PARTING
VI CONTENTS
6 Sachiko Ide 93
FORMAL FORMS AND DISCERNMENT: TWO NEGLECTED ASPECTS OF
UNIVERSALS OF LINGUISTIC POLITENESS
PART TWO
Perceptions and Language Attitudes 107
Editors Introduction to Part Two 109
7 Dennis R. Preston 112
LANGUAGE WITH AN ATTITUDE
8 Dennis R. Preston 132
THE LI L ABNER SYNDROME: WRITTEN REPRESENTATIONS OF SPEECH
9 Thomas Purnell, William Idsardi, and John Baugh 139
PERCEPTUAL AND PHONETIC EXPERIMENTS ON AMERICAN
ENGLISH DIALECT IDENTIFICATION
10 Gibson Ferguson 150
LANGUAGE EDUCATION POLICY AND THE MEDIUM OF INSTRUCTION
ISSUE IN POST-COLONIAL AFRICA
11 Isabelle Buchstaller 168
SOCIAL STEREOTYPES, PERSONALITY TRAITS AND REGIONAL
PERCEPTION DISPLACED: ATTITUDES TOWARDS THE NEW QUOTATIVES
IN THE U.K.
PART THREE
Multilingualism and Language Contact 183
Editors Introduction to Part Three 185
12 Jinny K.Choi 188
BILINGUALISM IN PARAGUAY: FORTY YEARS AFTER RUBIN S STUDY
13 Don Kulick and Christopher Stroud 201
CODE-SWITCHING IN GAPUN: SOCIAL AND LINGUISTIC ASPECTS
OF LANGUAGE USE IN A LANGUAGE SHIFTING COMMUNITY
14 Jan-Peter Blom and John J. Gumperz 216
SOCIAL MEANING IN LINGUISTIC STRUCTURE: CODE-SWITCHING IN
NORWAY
15 David Britain 231
DIALECT CONTACT, FOCUSING AND PHONOLOGICAL RULE COMPLEXITY:
THE KOINEISATION OF FENLAND ENGLISH
CONTENTS VII
16 Monica Heller 248
LEGITIMATE LANGUAGE IN A MULTILINGUAL SCHOOL
17 Ben Rampton 262
LANGUAGE CROSSING AND THE REDEFINITION OF REALITY
18 Miriam Meyerhoff and Nancy Niedzielski 271
THE GLOBALISATION OF VERNACULAR VARIATION
PART FOUR
Variation and Change 287
Editors Introduction to Part Four 289
19 William Labov 292
THE SOCIAL MOTIVATION OF A SOUND CHANGE
20 Rika Ito and Sali Tagliamonte 323
WELL WEIRD, RIGHTDODGY, VERY STRANGE, REALLY COOL: LAYERING
AND RECYCLING IN ENGLISH INTENSIFIERS
21 Gillian Sankoff and Helene Blondeau 339
LANGUAGE CHANGE ACROSS THE LIFESPAN: /r/ IN MONTREAL FRENCH
22 Peter Trudgill 358
NORWICH REVISITED: RECENT LINGUISTIC CHANGES IN AN ENGLISH
URBAN DIALECT
23 Richard Cameron 369
AGING AND GENDERING
PART FIVE
Social Class, Networks and Communities of Practice 387
Editors Introduction to Part Five 389
24 Lesley Milroy and James Milroy 392
SOCIAL NETWORK AND SOCIAL CLASS: TOWARD AN INTEGRATED
SOCIOLINGUISTIC MODEL
25 Paul Kerswill and Ann Williams 409
MOBILITY VERSUS SOCIAL CLASS IN DIALECT LEVELLING: EVIDENCE
FROM NEW AND OLD TOWNS IN ENGLAND
26 Terttu Nevalainen 418
MAKING THE BEST OF BAD DATA: EVIDENCE FOR SOCIOLINGUISTIC
VARIATION IN EARLY MODERN ENGLISH
VIII CONTENTS
27 Penelope Eckert 441
VOWELS AND NAIL POLISH: THE EMERGENCE OF LINGUISTIC STYLE
IN THE PREADOLESCENT HETEROSEXUAL MARKETPLACE
28 Janet Holmes and Stephanie Schnurr 448
?DOING FEMININITY AT WORK: MORE THAN JUST RELATIONAL PRACTICE
PART SIX
Gender 461
Editors Introduction to Part Six 463
29 Niloofar Haeri 466
A LINGUISTIC INNOVATION OF WOMEN IN CAIRO
30 Elinor Ochs 483
INDEXING GENDER
31 Scott Fabius Kiesling 498
POWER AND THE LANGUAGE OF MEN
32 Rusty Barrett 514
MARKEDNESS AND ST YLESWITC H I N G IN PERFORMANCES BY AFRICAN
AMERICAN DRAG QUEENS
Notes on Concept Questions 532
FIGURES
1.1 Practical issues in conducting a sociolinguistic interview 5
1.2 Some issues in questionnaire design 6
2.1 Percentage of intervocalic /t/ voicing by four newsreaders on two New Zealand
radio stations, YA and ZB (from Bell 1984) 33
2.2 Style as response and initiative: audience design and referee design (from Bell
1984) 35
4.1 Gender variation in each professional group 67
4.2 Topic variation in each professional group 68
4.3 Contrast in styles (percentages) 69
5.1 Summary diagram of the factors that constrain the polite choice of terms of direct
address in British English 85
5.2 Summary diagram of the factors that constrain the polite choice of formulaic
phrases of greeting and parting in British English 87
6.1 The absolute honorifics in Shuri dialect (response forms) 96
6.2 Two types of linguistic politeness 99
7.1 Results for ratings of They gave the award to Bill and I 117
7.2 A Michigan respondent s hand-drawn map 119
7.3 Another Michigan hand-drawn map 120
7.4 Computer-assisted generalizations of hand-drawn maps showing where
southeastern Michigan respondents believe speech regions exist in the USA 120
7.5 Means of ratings for language correctness by Michigan respondents for US
English (on a scale of 1-10, where 1 = least, and 10 = most correct) 124
7.6 Means of ratings for language pleasantness by Michigan respondents for US
English (on a scale of 1-10, where 1 = least, and 10 = most pleasant) 125
7.7 Means of ratings for language correctness by Alabama respondents for US
English (on a scale of 1 -10, where 1 = least, and 10 = most correct) 126
7.8 Means of ratings for language pleasantness by Alabama respondents for US
English (on a scale of 1 -10, where 1 = least, and 10 = most pleasant) 126
FIGURES
7.9 Folk and linguistic theories of language 129
8.1 A recorded conversation among young teenagers 134
15.1 The location of the Fens 232
15.2 Principal Fenland urban centres and other locations mentioned in the text 236
15.3 Onsets of/ai/used by a speaker from Emneth in the central Fens 237
15.4 Onsets of /ai/ used by a speaker from Wayhead in the eastern Fens 237
15.5 Onsets of /ai/ used by a speaker from Peterborough in the western Fens 238
15.6 Onsets of /ai/ used in the King s Lynn and Chatteris corpora 238
15.7 Onsets of /ai/ used by four central Fenland speakers from Wisbech 239
15.8 Realisations of A/ in the Chatteris speakers of the Chatteris corpus 241
15.9 Realisations of A/ in the Outwell speaker of the Chatteris corpus 241
15.10 Realisations of A/ in the King s Lynn corpus 241
15.11 The use of A/by four central Fenland speakers from Wisbech 242
15.12 The use of A/ by four central Fenland speakers from non-Wisbech central
Fenland locations 242
19.1 Location of the 69 informants on Martha s Vineyard. Ethnic origin is indicated as
follows: D English, ¦ Portuguese, ? Indian. Symbols placed side by side indicate
members of the same family 294
19.2 Measurement of typical (ay) diphthongs at first formant maximum 300
19.3 Correlation of instrumental measurement and impressionistic ratings of
centralization. Nos. 0-3: Scale II equivalents of impressionistic ratings of height of
first elements of 86 (ay) diphthongs, assigned before spectrographic measurement.
Seven different Martha s Vineyard speakers, males aged 14-60, are represented.
° identifies speaker EP, age 31; + identifies speaker GW, age 15 301
19.4 Phonetic determination of centralization. Centralization chart for North Tisbury
fisherman GB 303
20.1 Overall distribution of intensification by age 328
20.2 Distribution of very and really by age 329
20.3 Distribution of very and really by type of the modified adjectives (66+) 330
20.4 Distribution of very and really by type of the modified adjectives (35-65) 331
20.5 Distribution of very and rea//y by type of the modified adjectives (17-34) 331
20.6 Distribution of very by age and type of predication 332
20.7 Distribution of really by age and type of predication 333
21.1 Design of the trend and panel samples for the current study 343
21.2 Individual percentages of [R]/([R] + [r]) for the 32 panel speakers for 1971 and
1984. Trajectories plotted for all speakers who showed a significant
difference between the two years 347
21.3 Individual percentages of [R]/([R] + [r]) for the 32 trend speakers for 1971 and
for the 32 different trend speakers for 1984 349
21.4 Actual trajectories for all mid-range speakers under age 30 in 1971, and putative
trajectories for earlier stages 352
22.1 Variable (ng) by age-group and style - 1968 sample 359
22.2 Variable (e) by age-group and style - 1968 sample 360
22.3 % informants with A/ = [u] - both samples 362
22.4 % informants with loss of /e/ and /a/ 364
22.5 Variable (t) by age-group and style - both samples 365
22.6 Variable (e) by age-group and style - both samples 366
FIGURES
23.1 Degrees of difference between females and males across the lifespan for
intervocalic (d) 374
24.1 Map showing the Ulster Scots area (shaded) in relation to East and West Belfast 399
24.2 Macro- and microlevels of sociolinguistic structure 404
24.3 Average percentage use of black English vernacular-marked morphosyntactic
variants by four groups of Philadelphia speakers (adapted from Ash Myhill
1986:39). 408
26.1 The use of -(e)s (%) as opposed to -(e)th in the third-person singular in the whole
corpus in 1540-59, excluding have and do (CEEC 1998, male writers) 429
26.2 The use of -(e)s (%) as opposed to -(e)th in the third-person singular in London
in 1580-99, excluding have and do (CEEC 1998) 430
26.3 Relative frequency of multiple negation according to gender in three EModE
periods: 1520-50, 1580-1610 and 1660-80 {CEEC 1998 and Supplement) 431
26.4 Multiple negation according to social rank. Upper ranks: royalty, nobility, gentry;
middle ranks: professionals, merchants, social aspirers; lower ranks: other ranks
below the gentry (CEEC 1998 and Supplement) 432
29.1 Weak and strong palatalization compared in three age groups 473
29.2 View of weak and strong palatalization in an area graph 473
29.3 Percentages of weak and strong palatalization compared for women in four
social classes 474
29.4 Weak and strong palatalization according to age and social class among women 476
29.5 Weak and strong palatalization according to age and social class among men 476
29.6 Distribution of weak and strong palatalization for women in four educational
levels 478
29.7 Distribution of weak and strong palatalization among men in four educational
levels 478
30.1 Language and gender 487
TABLES
1.1 Data grid 8
1.2 Summary data extracted by speaker for (t) variable 13
1.3 Data extraction by token for existential constructions in Bequia English. (Tokens
are coded for a range of unique linguistic and social factors.) 14
2.1 Structure of style project sample: four informants each talk to three different
interviewers 38
2.2 eh index in speech by informants to interviewers 41
2.3 eh index in speech by interviewers to informants 42
2.4 Scores for possible pronunciations of Kerikeri 43
2.5 Four informants pronunciations of twenty Maori place names according to Maori
or English norms (score 0 = fully Maori; 4 = fully anglicized) 44
3.1 Ethnicity of referee and monophthongization 55
3.2 Lexical frequency and monophthongization 55
4.1 Effects of professional group and gender on variation 66
4.2 Effects of gender and topic in yuppie group 67
4.3 Effects of gender and topic in state professional group 67
7.1 Confusion matrix and summary statistics by dialect 115
7.2 Percentage over- and under-reporters for the ear vowel in Norwich 116
7.3 The two factor groups from the ratings of all areas 122
7.4 Means scores of both factor groups for ratings of the North and South 123
8.1 Comparison of means of respelled and nonrespelled Speakers 135
9.1 Confirmed appointments to view apartments advertised for rent in different
Greater San Francisco geographic areas (in percentages) 141
9.2 Population in different Greater San Francisco geographic areas by race and
ethnicity (in percentages) 142
9.3 Householders in different Greater San Francisco geographic areas by race and
ethnicity (in percentages) 142
9.4 Dialect and racial identification 144
XIV TABLES
10.1 The medium of education at lower primary level in selected African countries 151
11.1 Matched guise test results for go s associations with age, gender, and class (in
% frequency, respondent N = 88) 172
11.2 Overt attitudes results for go (N = 90) 172
11.3 Matched guise test results for be //Tee s associations with age, gender, and class
(in % frequency, N= 101) 173
11.4 Personality judgments for go and be like 175
11.5 Associations of go and be like with locality (in % frequency) 176
12.1 What language would you use______? 193
12.2 What language would you use______? 194
12.3 What language would you use______? 195
12.4 Language choice patterns in Oberwart, Austria 200
13.1 Languages known by villagers living in Gapun in 1987 203
13.2 Intrasentential code-switches 212
13.3 Intersentential code-switches 212
18.1 Variables in New Zealand English analysed as reflecting the influence of
international varieties of English 274
18.2 Full list of lexical pairs variables (Table 18.1) with frequencies of reported use in
1989 in sample of 60 working class New Zealanders (from Meyerhoff 1993;
numbers do not always equal 100 because of alternate options offered) 275
18.3 Summary of (t) variables in New Zealand English from Holmes (1995b:
59,63) 276
18.4 Attitudes towards variable lexical items in New Zealand English: variants with
most consistent responses (N = 21) 282
19.1 Population of Martha s Vineyard 295
19.2 Centralization of (ay) and (aw) by age level 305
19.3 Geographical distribution of centralization 308
19.4 Centralization by occupational groups 308
19.5 Centralization by ethnic groups 308
19.6 Centralization and orientation towards Martha s Vineyard 316
20.1 Summary of the shift in popularity of intensifiers in English (abstracted from
Mustanoja 1960:319-28) 324
20.2 Sub-sample of the York English Corpus 326
20.3 Frequency of intensifiers by lexical item (N 10) 328
20.4 Distribution of rea//y as intensifier and as emphasizer by four selected speakers 334
20.5 Three multivariate analyses of the contribution of factors to the probability of really
in contemporary British English 334
21.1 Patterns of change in the individual and the community (adapted from Labov
1994:83) 340
21.2 Addition of a pattern reflecting lifespan change that accompanies change at the
level of the community 341
21.3 Composition of 1971 trend subsample by age, sex, and social class (scores on
Linguistic Market index divided into 3 groups, corresponding to Working Class,
Lower Middle Class, and Upper Middle Class) 344
21.4 Codings for Bernard L in 1971 by Helene Blondeau and Sarah Moretti 344
21.5 The 20 stable speakers who remained categorical or near-categorical users of one
of the two variants across the study, 1971-1984 346
TABLES XV
21.6 Mean social characteristics and mean [R] %, 1971 and 1984 trend subsamples 348
21.7 Comparison of trend and panel subsamples over time 348
22.1 Variables involved in linguistic change 367
23.1 Number of speakers by age and gender 372
23.2 Intervocalic (d) by age and gender (frequencies, weights, degrees of difference) 374
24.1 Contrasting patterns of distribution of two vowels involved in change, according to
social class and sex of speaker, relative frequency of innovatory variants, and level of
correlation with network strength 400
25.1 Summary of demographic characteristics of Hull, Reading and Milton Keynes 411
25.2 Percentage use of variants of (ai), Milton Keynes working-class group (interview
with fieldworker) 413
25.3 Percentage use of variants of (ai), Reading working-class group (interview with
fieldworker) 413
25.4 Percentage use of variants of (au), Milton Keynes, interview style 414
25.5 Percentage use of variants of (au), Reading, interview style 414
26.1 Rank and status in Tudor and Stuart England 423
26.2 The frequency of occurrence (%) of -(e)s and single negation in the Johnson family
circle 1542-53 (CEEC 1996; for absolute figures, see the Appendix) 428
29.1 Percentages and probabilities of application of palatalization for dental stops 468
29.2 Percentages and probabilities of application of palatalization for following
environment 469
29.3 Comparison of following environments for weak and strong palatalization 471
29.4 Probability and percentage differences of application of palatalization between
men and women 472
29.5 Percentage of weak and strong palatalization in four styles among women and men 474
29.6 Cross-tabulation of social class and style for weak and strong palatalization among
women (%) 475
29.7 Cross-tabulation of style and social class for weak and strong palatalization among
men (%) 475
32.1 Stylistic variation in the speech of RuPaul on two television talk shows 522
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owner | DE-824 DE-384 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-20 DE-11 DE-739 DE-188 DE-521 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-473 DE-BY-UBG |
owner_facet | DE-824 DE-384 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-20 DE-11 DE-739 DE-188 DE-521 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-473 DE-BY-UBG |
physical | XXIV, 559 S. graph. Darst., Kt. |
publishDate | 2010 |
publishDateSearch | 2010 |
publishDateSort | 2010 |
publisher | Routledge |
record_format | marc |
spelling | The Routledge sociolinguistics reader ed. by Miriam Meyerhoff ... 1. publ. London [u.a.] Routledge 2010 XXIV, 559 S. graph. Darst., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Sociolinguistics Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 s DE-604 Meyerhoff, Miriam 1964- Sonstige (DE-588)131972391 oth HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=020413198&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | The Routledge sociolinguistics reader Sociolinguistics Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4077623-2 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | The Routledge sociolinguistics reader |
title_auth | The Routledge sociolinguistics reader |
title_exact_search | The Routledge sociolinguistics reader |
title_full | The Routledge sociolinguistics reader ed. by Miriam Meyerhoff ... |
title_fullStr | The Routledge sociolinguistics reader ed. by Miriam Meyerhoff ... |
title_full_unstemmed | The Routledge sociolinguistics reader ed. by Miriam Meyerhoff ... |
title_short | The Routledge sociolinguistics reader |
title_sort | the routledge sociolinguistics reader |
topic | Sociolinguistics Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 gnd |
topic_facet | Sociolinguistics Soziolinguistik Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=020413198&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT meyerhoffmiriam theroutledgesociolinguisticsreader |