Description

Book Synopsis

Since its original publication in 1997, English with an Accent has inspired generations of scholars to investigate linguistic discrimination, social categorization, social structures, and power. This new edition is an attempt to retain the spirit of the original while enriching and expanding it to reflect the greater understanding of linguistic discrimination that it has helped create.

This third edition has been substantially reworked to include:

  • An updated concept of social categories, how they are constructed in interaction, and how they can be invoked and perceived through linguistic cues or language ideologies
  • Refreshed accounts of the countless social and structural factors that go into linguistic discrimination
  • Expanded attention to specific linguistic structures, language groups, and social domains that go beyond those provided in earlier editions
  • New dedicated chapter on American Sign L

    Trade Review

    The third edition of English with an Accent presents an extraordinary new resource created from a time-honored classic, taking the pieces of the original and elegantly intersecting them with 21st-century language practice. The original material is still there; however, it has been rewoven to include a broader semiotic realm, a deeper representation of language variation across multiple modalities, a richer set of theoretical and methodological approaches, and a new coherence rooted in the fact that language variation is simultaneously arbitrary and powerfully meaningful. As such, this edition sets a new standard for the presentation and discussion of linguistic discrimination.

    Robin Queen, University of Michigan

    With crisp prose and cogent arguments, the authors recreate the eye-opening impact of English with an Accent in light of recent movements for social justice, crafting activities, exercises, and discussion questions that directly help readers engage in questions of how language socialization works and how it affects our personal lives as well as our society’s future.

    Kirk Hazen, West Virginia University

    Be prepared to get comfortable with being uncomfortable. This edition of English with an Accent hits home and will keep you engaged and engrossed in issues that society too often doesn’t understand in any meaningful and life-altering way. Well, the road to enlightenment is clearly provided here.

    Sonja Lanehart, University of Arizona

    Since its first publication, English with An Accent has inspired conversations that grapple with and challenge the ways people use language to recognize, categorize, and rank social differences. This latest version builds on this important foundation while providing significant updates to the coverage of topics and theory. Written in an engaging, provocative style, this new edition by Barrett, Cramer and McGowan is comprehensive and accessible. It will leave readers with greater insight into and critical awareness of the subtle role language variation plays in the maintenance of power today and the marginalization and on-going subordination of particular social groups, in the U.S. and elsewhere.

    Barbra A. Meek, University of Michigan



    Table of Contents

    Contents

    List of Figures

    List of Tables

    The International Phonetic Alphabet

    Preface to the Third Edition

    Chapter One: The pronunciation of difference

    Reproducing inequality

    Discourse structural racism

    Language ideologies

    Red summer

    Where we are headed

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Two: Language, categorization, and social identities

    Fifty shades of grue

    Only skin deep

    Sorting humanity

    Categories and cognition

    Is that a sandwich?

    Some basic semiotics

    Language and racialization

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Three: Things linguists know about language

    Facts about language

    Linguistic potential

    Variety is the spice of life!

    Are you a robot?

    So-called Standard English

    Communicative effectiveness depends on variation

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Four: Language subordination

    Reading a textbook: roles and responsibilities

    Rejecting the gift: the individual’s role in the communicative process

    Hesitance and uncertainty?

    Standard language ideology

    Confronting ideologies

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Five: Place-based variation in the American context

    The social meaning of place

    Regional varieties of American English

    Spread the word

    Vowels on the move

    Regional variation in morphology and syntax

    OMG! There's, like, so much more variation!

    Structured variation: the hidden life of language

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Six: Language, racialization, and racism

    No MSG

    Race, ethnicity, and linguistic variation

    Ethnicity-indexing variation: words and sounds

    Ethnicity-indexing variation: sentences and meanings

    No MSG, no lazy grammar

    Language, interaction, and ethnic inequality

    Language, race, appropriation, and whiteness

    Language is love

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Seven: Language diversity in the United States

    Estados Unidos no tiene un idioma oficial

    Language abundance

    Stolen childhoods

    Language ideologies and English public space

    Embracing bilingualism

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Eight: American Sign Language and deaf culture

    How people communicate

    What it means to be hearing

    Deaf culture

    Sign languages and American Sign Language

    Martha's Vineyard Sign Language

    Oralism vs. manualism

    Language ideology and deaf culture

    Ideologies within the deaf community

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Nine: Putting language on the map

    How we see the language around us

    Perceptual dialectology

    Linguistic landscapes

    The linguistic perception of the American South

    Kountry Livin’

    What it means to sound Southern

    Perceptions meet strategies of condescension

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Ten: A history of ‘r’ in the United States

    Meaningful, important, and arbitrary

    The remarkable letter ‘r’

    Rhotics: variety, terminology, and symbols

    American [ɹ] is wei(r)d

    Where did American [ɹ] come from?

    From non-rhotic to rhotic: American sound change in the first half of the 20th century

    Non-rhotic in Manhattan

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Eleven: The communicative burden in education

    The medium of instruction

    Invisible ideologies go to school

    The setting of goals

    Whose language?

    Appropriacy arguments

    Languagelessness

    Education as cultural assimilation

    How teachers talk

    How graduate students talk

    What the science tells us

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Twelve: Language use, media stereotypes, and fake news

    Storytellers, Inc.

    Teaching children how to discriminate

    Building on stereotypes

    Disney’s worldview

    Information literacy: beyond cartoons

    Echo chambers and filter bubbles

    Bad is stronger than good

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Thirteen: Language in the workplace

    Unwelcoming environments

    Sorry not sorry

    "This is America, speak English!"

    "Nobody can understand those people"

    "You sound so insecure when you talk the way I do"

    "You’re so much prettier when you’re not angry"

    White men talking

    Discussion questions

    Chapter Fourteen: Examining the American judicial system and housing

    Language(s) and the law

    Lost in translation

    Linguists as experts

    American housing problems

    Heard but not seen

    I had you at "hello"

    A human failing

    Discussion questions

    Epilogue: Teach your children well

    Honesty & equality & respect & linguistic diversity

    You must be carefully taught

    Our hope for you, dear reader

    Bibliography

    Index

English with an Accent

    Product form

    £39.99

    Includes FREE delivery

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 26 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Rusty Barrett, Jennifer Cramer, Kevin B. McGowan

    15 in stock


      View other formats and editions of English with an Accent by Rusty Barrett

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis
      Publication Date: 11/30/2022 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781138041936, 978-1138041936
      ISBN10: 1138041939

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Since its original publication in 1997, English with an Accent has inspired generations of scholars to investigate linguistic discrimination, social categorization, social structures, and power. This new edition is an attempt to retain the spirit of the original while enriching and expanding it to reflect the greater understanding of linguistic discrimination that it has helped create.

      This third edition has been substantially reworked to include:

      • An updated concept of social categories, how they are constructed in interaction, and how they can be invoked and perceived through linguistic cues or language ideologies
      • Refreshed accounts of the countless social and structural factors that go into linguistic discrimination
      • Expanded attention to specific linguistic structures, language groups, and social domains that go beyond those provided in earlier editions
      • New dedicated chapter on American Sign L

        Trade Review

        The third edition of English with an Accent presents an extraordinary new resource created from a time-honored classic, taking the pieces of the original and elegantly intersecting them with 21st-century language practice. The original material is still there; however, it has been rewoven to include a broader semiotic realm, a deeper representation of language variation across multiple modalities, a richer set of theoretical and methodological approaches, and a new coherence rooted in the fact that language variation is simultaneously arbitrary and powerfully meaningful. As such, this edition sets a new standard for the presentation and discussion of linguistic discrimination.

        Robin Queen, University of Michigan

        With crisp prose and cogent arguments, the authors recreate the eye-opening impact of English with an Accent in light of recent movements for social justice, crafting activities, exercises, and discussion questions that directly help readers engage in questions of how language socialization works and how it affects our personal lives as well as our society’s future.

        Kirk Hazen, West Virginia University

        Be prepared to get comfortable with being uncomfortable. This edition of English with an Accent hits home and will keep you engaged and engrossed in issues that society too often doesn’t understand in any meaningful and life-altering way. Well, the road to enlightenment is clearly provided here.

        Sonja Lanehart, University of Arizona

        Since its first publication, English with An Accent has inspired conversations that grapple with and challenge the ways people use language to recognize, categorize, and rank social differences. This latest version builds on this important foundation while providing significant updates to the coverage of topics and theory. Written in an engaging, provocative style, this new edition by Barrett, Cramer and McGowan is comprehensive and accessible. It will leave readers with greater insight into and critical awareness of the subtle role language variation plays in the maintenance of power today and the marginalization and on-going subordination of particular social groups, in the U.S. and elsewhere.

        Barbra A. Meek, University of Michigan



        Table of Contents

        Contents

        List of Figures

        List of Tables

        The International Phonetic Alphabet

        Preface to the Third Edition

        Chapter One: The pronunciation of difference

        Reproducing inequality

        Discourse structural racism

        Language ideologies

        Red summer

        Where we are headed

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Two: Language, categorization, and social identities

        Fifty shades of grue

        Only skin deep

        Sorting humanity

        Categories and cognition

        Is that a sandwich?

        Some basic semiotics

        Language and racialization

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Three: Things linguists know about language

        Facts about language

        Linguistic potential

        Variety is the spice of life!

        Are you a robot?

        So-called Standard English

        Communicative effectiveness depends on variation

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Four: Language subordination

        Reading a textbook: roles and responsibilities

        Rejecting the gift: the individual’s role in the communicative process

        Hesitance and uncertainty?

        Standard language ideology

        Confronting ideologies

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Five: Place-based variation in the American context

        The social meaning of place

        Regional varieties of American English

        Spread the word

        Vowels on the move

        Regional variation in morphology and syntax

        OMG! There's, like, so much more variation!

        Structured variation: the hidden life of language

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Six: Language, racialization, and racism

        No MSG

        Race, ethnicity, and linguistic variation

        Ethnicity-indexing variation: words and sounds

        Ethnicity-indexing variation: sentences and meanings

        No MSG, no lazy grammar

        Language, interaction, and ethnic inequality

        Language, race, appropriation, and whiteness

        Language is love

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Seven: Language diversity in the United States

        Estados Unidos no tiene un idioma oficial

        Language abundance

        Stolen childhoods

        Language ideologies and English public space

        Embracing bilingualism

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Eight: American Sign Language and deaf culture

        How people communicate

        What it means to be hearing

        Deaf culture

        Sign languages and American Sign Language

        Martha's Vineyard Sign Language

        Oralism vs. manualism

        Language ideology and deaf culture

        Ideologies within the deaf community

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Nine: Putting language on the map

        How we see the language around us

        Perceptual dialectology

        Linguistic landscapes

        The linguistic perception of the American South

        Kountry Livin’

        What it means to sound Southern

        Perceptions meet strategies of condescension

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Ten: A history of ‘r’ in the United States

        Meaningful, important, and arbitrary

        The remarkable letter ‘r’

        Rhotics: variety, terminology, and symbols

        American [ɹ] is wei(r)d

        Where did American [ɹ] come from?

        From non-rhotic to rhotic: American sound change in the first half of the 20th century

        Non-rhotic in Manhattan

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Eleven: The communicative burden in education

        The medium of instruction

        Invisible ideologies go to school

        The setting of goals

        Whose language?

        Appropriacy arguments

        Languagelessness

        Education as cultural assimilation

        How teachers talk

        How graduate students talk

        What the science tells us

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Twelve: Language use, media stereotypes, and fake news

        Storytellers, Inc.

        Teaching children how to discriminate

        Building on stereotypes

        Disney’s worldview

        Information literacy: beyond cartoons

        Echo chambers and filter bubbles

        Bad is stronger than good

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Thirteen: Language in the workplace

        Unwelcoming environments

        Sorry not sorry

        "This is America, speak English!"

        "Nobody can understand those people"

        "You sound so insecure when you talk the way I do"

        "You’re so much prettier when you’re not angry"

        White men talking

        Discussion questions

        Chapter Fourteen: Examining the American judicial system and housing

        Language(s) and the law

        Lost in translation

        Linguists as experts

        American housing problems

        Heard but not seen

        I had you at "hello"

        A human failing

        Discussion questions

        Epilogue: Teach your children well

        Honesty & equality & respect & linguistic diversity

        You must be carefully taught

        Our hope for you, dear reader

        Bibliography

        Index

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