Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

“Overall, the volume provides a balanced survey of important topics, research methods and trends, and contemporary issues in the field of sociolinguistics and offers instructors a valuable option for advanced undergraduate or graduate students.” - LINGUIST List 33.1917



Table of Contents

List of Figures xiii

List of Tables xiv

Acknowledgments xv

About the Companion Website xvii

1 Introduction 1

Key Topics 1

The Nature of Language 2

Knowledge of Language 3

Competence and performance 4

Variation 6

Variants and the linguistic variable 7

Language Users and Their Groups: Identities 8

Language and Culture 10

Directions of influence 11

The Whorfian hypothesis 11

Correlations 13

The Interdisciplinary Legacy of Sociolinguistics 14

Overview of the Book 16

Chapter Summary 16

Exercises 17

Further Reading 18

References 19

Part I Languages, Communities, and Contexts 23

2 Languages, Dialects, and Varieties 25

Key Topics 25

What is a Language? 25

Language or Dialect? 26

Mutual intelligibility 27

The role of social identity 29

Standardization 30

The standard as an abstraction 30

The standardization process 31

The standard and language change 32

Standard language? 33

The standard–dialect hierarchy 33

Regional Dialects 34

Dialect geography 34

Everyone has an accent 35

Social Dialects 36

Kiezdeutsch ‘neighborhood German’ 37

Ethnic dialects 39

African American Vernacular English 40

Features of AAVE 41

Development of AAVE 42

Societal aspects of AAVE Use 43

Styles and Indexes: The Social Meanings of Linguistic Forms 43

Chapter Summary 47

Exercises 47

Further Reading 48

References 49

3 Defining Groups 55

Key Topics 55

Speech Communities 56

Linguistic boundaries 56

Shared norms 57

Communities of Practice 60

Social Networks 62

Social Identities 64

Beliefs about Language and Social Groups 65

Language ideologies 66

The standard language ideology 66

The purist ideology 67

Monoglossic ideologies 67

Iconicity, erasure, and recursivity 68

Language attitudes 69

Perceptual dialectology 69

Matched/verbal guises 70

Implicit association task (IAT) 71

Chapter Summary 72

Exercises 72

Further Reading 73

References 74

4 Language in Context: Pragmatics 79

Key Topics 79

Speech Acts 79

Performatives 80

Implicature 83

Maxims 83

Politeness 85

Face 85

Positive and negative politeness 86

Beyond politeness theory 87

Politeness and indirectness 88

Pronouns 89

Tu and vous: power and solidarity 89

Pronouns and positioning 92

Naming and Titles 92

Fluidity and change in address terms 94

Chapter Summary 97

Exercises 97

Further Reading 100

References 100

Part II Theory and Methods 105

5 Language Variation and Change 107

Key Topics 107

Variables and Correlations 107

Types of linguistic variables 108

Indicators, markers and stereotypes 109

Independent variables 109

Data Collection and Analysis 110

The observer’s paradox 110

The sociolinguistic interview 110

Sampling 111

Apparent time and real time 112

Doing Quantitative Research: What Do the Numbers Really Mean? 112

Regional Variation 113

Mapping dialects 114

Methods in dialectology 115

Dialect mixture and free variation 117

Linguistic atlases 117

Social Variation 118

Social class membership 118

The First Wave of Variation Studies 120

Early work on gender variation 121

The fourth floor 121

Variation in Norwich 124

Variation in Detroit 124

Variation in Glasgow 125

Linguistic constraints on variation 126

Language Variation and Change 127

Change from above and below 127

Some changes in progress 127

Change across space: urban centers and physical barriers 129

Change over time or age-grading? 129

Martha’s Vineyard 131

Gender and language change 132

Language change and the linguistic marketplace 136

The Second Wave of Variation Studies 137

Social networks 138

Social network theory and language change 139

Gender variation in the second wave 140

Jocks and burnouts 141

The Third Wave of Variation Studies 142

Stance, style, and identity 142

Change across the lifespan 144

Chapter Summary 144

Exercises 144

Further Reading 146

References 146

6 Ethnographic Approaches in Sociolinguistics 153

Key Topics 153

Ethnography: Participant Observation 153

The Ethnography of Communication 155

Communicative competence 156

The communicative event and communicative acts 157

The SPEAKING device 157

Ethnography and beyond 160

Ethnomethodology 161

Background knowledge as part of communication 161

Commonsense knowledge and practical reasoning 162

Garfinkel and his students: studies in ethnomethodology 163

Ethnomethodology and conversation analysis 164

Critical Ethnography 164

(Socio)linguistic Ethnography 165

Digital Ethnographies: Research in Online Communities 167

Ethnography in Combination with Other Sociolinguistic Methods 168

Chapter Summary 169

Exercises 169

Further Reading 171

References 172

7 Discourse Analysis 175

Key Topics 175

Conversation Analysis 176

Adjacency pairs 177

Openings 178

Closings 179

Turn-taking 181

Repair 182

Institutional talk 183

Membership categorization 185

Interactional Sociolinguistics 185

Data and methodologies 186

Contextualization and stance 188

Identities 189

Critical Discourse Analysis 192

Contrasts and critiques 193

Methodologies and connections 193

Corpus Linguistics 196

Chapter Summary 198

Exercises 198

Further Reading 199

References 200

Part III Multilingual Matters 207

8 Languages in Contact: Multilingual Societies and Multilingual Discourse 209

Key Topics 209

Multilingualism as a Societal Phenomenon 210

Language competencies in multilingual societies 211

Language ideologies surrounding multilingualism 211

Linguistic landscapes 213

Language attitudes in multilingual settings 216

Language Maintenance and Shift 218

Diglossia 219

Domains 220

Language attitudes and ideologies 220

Language learning 220

The statuses of the H and L varieties 221

Extended diglossia and language maintenance 222

Questioning diglossia 223

Multilingual Discourse 224

Metaphorical and situational codeswitching 225

Communication accommodation theory 225

The markedness model 226

Multilingual identities 227

Bricolage 230

Chapter Summary 231

Exercises 231

Further Reading 235

References 235

9 Contact Varieties: Structural Consequences of Social Factors 243

Key Topics 243

The Structure of Codeswitching 243

Loanwords and Calques 245

Convergence 246

Ethnicized and Social Dialects as Contact Varieties 247

Latinx Englishes 248

Straattaal ‘street language’ 249

Mixed Languages 250

Lingua Francas 252

Pidgin and Creole Languages: Definitions 253

Connections between P/C languages and second language acquisition 254

Creole Formation 255

Theories of creole genesis 256

Geographical Distribution 258

Linguistic Characteristics of P/C Languages 259

Phonology 260

Morphosyntax 260

Vocabulary 261

From Pidgin to Creole and Beyond 262

Creole continuum? 263

Chapter Summary 265

Exercises 265

Further Reading 266

References 266

10 Language, the Nation, and Beyond 273

Key Topics 273

Language and Nation 273

Nationalism and language 274

Language and national identity categories 278

Belonging beyond the nation 280

Language and Migration 282

Identity construction in the context of migration 282

Identity over time and space 284

Diversity and superdiversity 287

Discourses of migration and integration 288

LADO 291

Language and Globalization 293

Global English: threat or promise? 295

Language and the Digital World 296

Chapter Summary 298

Exercises 298

Further Reading 298

References 299

Part IV Sociolinguistics and Social Justice 305

11 Language, Gender, and Sexuality 307

Key Topics 307

Defining Terms: Sex Category, Gender, and Sexuality 307

Sexist Language 309

Grammatical gender marking 310

Language change 312

Deficit, Dominance, and Difference 313

Women’s language as a deficit 314

Dominance 315

Difference 316

Gender and Sexuality Identities 317

Multiple identities 318

The role of hegemonic ideologies in gender and sexuality identity construction 319

Context-specific identity construction: the workplace 321

Discourses of Gender and Sexuality 323

Normative discourses 323

Discourses about language use 325

Chapter Summary 326

Exercises 326

Further Reading 327

References 327

12 Sociolinguistics and Education 335

Key Topics 335

Social Dialects and Education 336

Restricted codes and the language gap 336

Difference not deficit 337

Role of the home dialect in education 340

An achievement gap? 342

Education in Multilingual Contexts 343

Ideologies 343

Use of minoritized languages in the classroom 345

Elite and immigrant bilingualism 348

Education and World-Wide English 349

Circles of English 350

English in world-wide education 350

Elite closure 351

English in Europe 353

Chapter Summary 354

Exercises 355

Further Reading 356

References 356

13 Language Policy and Planning 365

Key Topics 365

Terminology, Concepts, and Development of the Field 365

Types of language planning 366

The intellectual history of LPP 369

Data and methods 370

LPP and Nationalization 372

LPP in Turkey: orthography and purity 372

LPP in the Soviet Union and the post-Soviet era: from Russification to nationalization 373

Official monolingualism in France 375

LPP in Post- and Neo-Colonial Contexts 376

Kenya 376

India 377

Multilingual Countries and LPP 378

Canada 379

Belgium 380

Papua New Guinea 381

Singapore 381

Feminist Language Planning 382

Endangered Languages and the Spread of English 384

Endangered languages 384

Family language policy, new speakers, and LPP 385

English world-wide 387

Language policy … or lack thereof 389

Chapter Summary 389

Exercises 389

Further Reading 390

References 391

Glossary 397

Index 421

An Introduction to Sociolinguistics

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    A Paperback / softback by Ronald Wardhaugh, Janet M. Fuller

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      View other formats and editions of An Introduction to Sociolinguistics by Ronald Wardhaugh

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 22/04/2021
      ISBN13: 9781119473428, 978-1119473428
      ISBN10: 111947342X

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review

      “Overall, the volume provides a balanced survey of important topics, research methods and trends, and contemporary issues in the field of sociolinguistics and offers instructors a valuable option for advanced undergraduate or graduate students.” - LINGUIST List 33.1917



      Table of Contents

      List of Figures xiii

      List of Tables xiv

      Acknowledgments xv

      About the Companion Website xvii

      1 Introduction 1

      Key Topics 1

      The Nature of Language 2

      Knowledge of Language 3

      Competence and performance 4

      Variation 6

      Variants and the linguistic variable 7

      Language Users and Their Groups: Identities 8

      Language and Culture 10

      Directions of influence 11

      The Whorfian hypothesis 11

      Correlations 13

      The Interdisciplinary Legacy of Sociolinguistics 14

      Overview of the Book 16

      Chapter Summary 16

      Exercises 17

      Further Reading 18

      References 19

      Part I Languages, Communities, and Contexts 23

      2 Languages, Dialects, and Varieties 25

      Key Topics 25

      What is a Language? 25

      Language or Dialect? 26

      Mutual intelligibility 27

      The role of social identity 29

      Standardization 30

      The standard as an abstraction 30

      The standardization process 31

      The standard and language change 32

      Standard language? 33

      The standard–dialect hierarchy 33

      Regional Dialects 34

      Dialect geography 34

      Everyone has an accent 35

      Social Dialects 36

      Kiezdeutsch ‘neighborhood German’ 37

      Ethnic dialects 39

      African American Vernacular English 40

      Features of AAVE 41

      Development of AAVE 42

      Societal aspects of AAVE Use 43

      Styles and Indexes: The Social Meanings of Linguistic Forms 43

      Chapter Summary 47

      Exercises 47

      Further Reading 48

      References 49

      3 Defining Groups 55

      Key Topics 55

      Speech Communities 56

      Linguistic boundaries 56

      Shared norms 57

      Communities of Practice 60

      Social Networks 62

      Social Identities 64

      Beliefs about Language and Social Groups 65

      Language ideologies 66

      The standard language ideology 66

      The purist ideology 67

      Monoglossic ideologies 67

      Iconicity, erasure, and recursivity 68

      Language attitudes 69

      Perceptual dialectology 69

      Matched/verbal guises 70

      Implicit association task (IAT) 71

      Chapter Summary 72

      Exercises 72

      Further Reading 73

      References 74

      4 Language in Context: Pragmatics 79

      Key Topics 79

      Speech Acts 79

      Performatives 80

      Implicature 83

      Maxims 83

      Politeness 85

      Face 85

      Positive and negative politeness 86

      Beyond politeness theory 87

      Politeness and indirectness 88

      Pronouns 89

      Tu and vous: power and solidarity 89

      Pronouns and positioning 92

      Naming and Titles 92

      Fluidity and change in address terms 94

      Chapter Summary 97

      Exercises 97

      Further Reading 100

      References 100

      Part II Theory and Methods 105

      5 Language Variation and Change 107

      Key Topics 107

      Variables and Correlations 107

      Types of linguistic variables 108

      Indicators, markers and stereotypes 109

      Independent variables 109

      Data Collection and Analysis 110

      The observer’s paradox 110

      The sociolinguistic interview 110

      Sampling 111

      Apparent time and real time 112

      Doing Quantitative Research: What Do the Numbers Really Mean? 112

      Regional Variation 113

      Mapping dialects 114

      Methods in dialectology 115

      Dialect mixture and free variation 117

      Linguistic atlases 117

      Social Variation 118

      Social class membership 118

      The First Wave of Variation Studies 120

      Early work on gender variation 121

      The fourth floor 121

      Variation in Norwich 124

      Variation in Detroit 124

      Variation in Glasgow 125

      Linguistic constraints on variation 126

      Language Variation and Change 127

      Change from above and below 127

      Some changes in progress 127

      Change across space: urban centers and physical barriers 129

      Change over time or age-grading? 129

      Martha’s Vineyard 131

      Gender and language change 132

      Language change and the linguistic marketplace 136

      The Second Wave of Variation Studies 137

      Social networks 138

      Social network theory and language change 139

      Gender variation in the second wave 140

      Jocks and burnouts 141

      The Third Wave of Variation Studies 142

      Stance, style, and identity 142

      Change across the lifespan 144

      Chapter Summary 144

      Exercises 144

      Further Reading 146

      References 146

      6 Ethnographic Approaches in Sociolinguistics 153

      Key Topics 153

      Ethnography: Participant Observation 153

      The Ethnography of Communication 155

      Communicative competence 156

      The communicative event and communicative acts 157

      The SPEAKING device 157

      Ethnography and beyond 160

      Ethnomethodology 161

      Background knowledge as part of communication 161

      Commonsense knowledge and practical reasoning 162

      Garfinkel and his students: studies in ethnomethodology 163

      Ethnomethodology and conversation analysis 164

      Critical Ethnography 164

      (Socio)linguistic Ethnography 165

      Digital Ethnographies: Research in Online Communities 167

      Ethnography in Combination with Other Sociolinguistic Methods 168

      Chapter Summary 169

      Exercises 169

      Further Reading 171

      References 172

      7 Discourse Analysis 175

      Key Topics 175

      Conversation Analysis 176

      Adjacency pairs 177

      Openings 178

      Closings 179

      Turn-taking 181

      Repair 182

      Institutional talk 183

      Membership categorization 185

      Interactional Sociolinguistics 185

      Data and methodologies 186

      Contextualization and stance 188

      Identities 189

      Critical Discourse Analysis 192

      Contrasts and critiques 193

      Methodologies and connections 193

      Corpus Linguistics 196

      Chapter Summary 198

      Exercises 198

      Further Reading 199

      References 200

      Part III Multilingual Matters 207

      8 Languages in Contact: Multilingual Societies and Multilingual Discourse 209

      Key Topics 209

      Multilingualism as a Societal Phenomenon 210

      Language competencies in multilingual societies 211

      Language ideologies surrounding multilingualism 211

      Linguistic landscapes 213

      Language attitudes in multilingual settings 216

      Language Maintenance and Shift 218

      Diglossia 219

      Domains 220

      Language attitudes and ideologies 220

      Language learning 220

      The statuses of the H and L varieties 221

      Extended diglossia and language maintenance 222

      Questioning diglossia 223

      Multilingual Discourse 224

      Metaphorical and situational codeswitching 225

      Communication accommodation theory 225

      The markedness model 226

      Multilingual identities 227

      Bricolage 230

      Chapter Summary 231

      Exercises 231

      Further Reading 235

      References 235

      9 Contact Varieties: Structural Consequences of Social Factors 243

      Key Topics 243

      The Structure of Codeswitching 243

      Loanwords and Calques 245

      Convergence 246

      Ethnicized and Social Dialects as Contact Varieties 247

      Latinx Englishes 248

      Straattaal ‘street language’ 249

      Mixed Languages 250

      Lingua Francas 252

      Pidgin and Creole Languages: Definitions 253

      Connections between P/C languages and second language acquisition 254

      Creole Formation 255

      Theories of creole genesis 256

      Geographical Distribution 258

      Linguistic Characteristics of P/C Languages 259

      Phonology 260

      Morphosyntax 260

      Vocabulary 261

      From Pidgin to Creole and Beyond 262

      Creole continuum? 263

      Chapter Summary 265

      Exercises 265

      Further Reading 266

      References 266

      10 Language, the Nation, and Beyond 273

      Key Topics 273

      Language and Nation 273

      Nationalism and language 274

      Language and national identity categories 278

      Belonging beyond the nation 280

      Language and Migration 282

      Identity construction in the context of migration 282

      Identity over time and space 284

      Diversity and superdiversity 287

      Discourses of migration and integration 288

      LADO 291

      Language and Globalization 293

      Global English: threat or promise? 295

      Language and the Digital World 296

      Chapter Summary 298

      Exercises 298

      Further Reading 298

      References 299

      Part IV Sociolinguistics and Social Justice 305

      11 Language, Gender, and Sexuality 307

      Key Topics 307

      Defining Terms: Sex Category, Gender, and Sexuality 307

      Sexist Language 309

      Grammatical gender marking 310

      Language change 312

      Deficit, Dominance, and Difference 313

      Women’s language as a deficit 314

      Dominance 315

      Difference 316

      Gender and Sexuality Identities 317

      Multiple identities 318

      The role of hegemonic ideologies in gender and sexuality identity construction 319

      Context-specific identity construction: the workplace 321

      Discourses of Gender and Sexuality 323

      Normative discourses 323

      Discourses about language use 325

      Chapter Summary 326

      Exercises 326

      Further Reading 327

      References 327

      12 Sociolinguistics and Education 335

      Key Topics 335

      Social Dialects and Education 336

      Restricted codes and the language gap 336

      Difference not deficit 337

      Role of the home dialect in education 340

      An achievement gap? 342

      Education in Multilingual Contexts 343

      Ideologies 343

      Use of minoritized languages in the classroom 345

      Elite and immigrant bilingualism 348

      Education and World-Wide English 349

      Circles of English 350

      English in world-wide education 350

      Elite closure 351

      English in Europe 353

      Chapter Summary 354

      Exercises 355

      Further Reading 356

      References 356

      13 Language Policy and Planning 365

      Key Topics 365

      Terminology, Concepts, and Development of the Field 365

      Types of language planning 366

      The intellectual history of LPP 369

      Data and methods 370

      LPP and Nationalization 372

      LPP in Turkey: orthography and purity 372

      LPP in the Soviet Union and the post-Soviet era: from Russification to nationalization 373

      Official monolingualism in France 375

      LPP in Post- and Neo-Colonial Contexts 376

      Kenya 376

      India 377

      Multilingual Countries and LPP 378

      Canada 379

      Belgium 380

      Papua New Guinea 381

      Singapore 381

      Feminist Language Planning 382

      Endangered Languages and the Spread of English 384

      Endangered languages 384

      Family language policy, new speakers, and LPP 385

      English world-wide 387

      Language policy … or lack thereof 389

      Chapter Summary 389

      Exercises 389

      Further Reading 390

      References 391

      Glossary 397

      Index 421

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