Each section includes a brief introductory statement, sets of guiding questions, and
Trade Review
"Alessandro Duranti has succeeded in compiling an excellent reader that many instructors and students will find useful as an introduction to key works in linguistic anthropology. Leaders in the theory and practice of contemporary linguistic anthropology are well represented, and all of the articles are excellent; indeed, most are recognized as contemporary "classics" in the field. This reader is an excellent addition to the growing library of readers in linguistic anthropology and a valuable new resource for both students and teachers." (Current Anthropology [from 1st edition]) "Many of the articles included...are examples of highly innovative scholarly work on issues of language related to culture. It provides an excellent (and long overdue) discussion of terminology, American lingustic anthropology's development within Cultural Anthropology, its subsequent drift away from anthropology towards an independent discipline increasingly focused on theoretical anthropologists in the late 1960s, and its reestablishment as a subfield of anthropology in the 1980s-90s. As a textbook this reader makes a very useful teaching aid, as a source book it provides valuable insights into the discipline of linguistic anthropology." (Linguist List)
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments to the Second Edition. Preface to the Second Edition.
Linguistic Anthropology: History, Ideas, and Issues (Alessandro Duranti).
Part I: Ideal and Real Speech Communities.
Introduction.
1 The Speech Community (John J. Gumperz).
2 The African-American Speech Community: Reality and Sociolinguists (Marcyliena Morgan).
3 The Social Circulation of Media Discourse and the Mediation of Communities (Debra Spitulnik).
4 Communication of Respect in Interethnic Service Encounters (Benjamin Bailey).
5 The Idealised Native Speaker, Reified Ethnicities, and Classroom Realities (Constant Leung, Roxy Harris, and Ben Rampton).
Part II: The Performance of Language: Events, Genres, and Narratives.
Introduction.
6 Ways of Speaking (Dell Hymes).
7 Formality and Informality in Communicative Events (Judith T. Irvine)
8 Universal and Culture-Specific Properties of Greetings (Alessandro Duranti).
9 Genre, Intertextuality, and Social Power (Charles L. Briggs and Richard Bauman).
10 Narrating the Political Self in a Campaign for US Congress (Alessandro Duranti).
11 Hip Hop Nation Language (H. Samy Alim).
Part III: Language Socialization and Literacy Practices.
Introduction.
12 Language Acquisition and Socialization: Three Developmental Stories and Their Implications (Elinor Ochs and Bambi B. Schieffelin).
13 Participant Structures and Communicative Competence: Warm Springs Children in Community and Classroom (Susan U. Philips).
14 What No Bedtime Story Means: Narrative Skills at Home and School (Shirley Brice Heath).
15 Creating Social Identities through Doctrina Narratives (Patricia Baquedano-López).
Part IV: The Power of Language.
Introduction.
16 Arizona Tewa Kiva Speech as a Manifestation of a Dominant Language Ideology (Paul V. Kroskrity).
17 Language Ideology and Linguistic Differentiation (Judith T. Irvine and Susan Gal).
18 The “Father Knows Best” Dynamic in Dinnertime Narratives (Elinor Ochs and Carolyn Taylor).
19 Professional Vision (Charles Goodwin).
20 Language, Race, and White Public Space (Jane H. Hill).
21 No (Don Kulick).
Index.