Title: American slang in mainstream magazine writing
1American slang in mainstream magazine writing
AACL 2008 BYU March 13-15 2008
- Anna Belladelli
- University of Verona, Italy
2The study of ephemeral American English takes an
open mind, patience, and wide-ranging interests
one must explore traditional sources of words and
grammatical patterns, like books and magazines
but one must look at out-of-the-way magazines,
not Time or Newsweek (Adams 2000 384)
3What is slang?
- SLANG SHOULD NO LONGER BE DESCRIBED AS
- Appendix of standard language
- Curious vocabulary
- Created at the peripheries of society
- Used secretly, occasionally
- SLANG IS
- Ordinary competence of language users (Eble 1996)
- Unsanitized vocabulary
- Vehicle of identity and cultural heritage
- Used extensively
4Starting Point Cosmopolitan (2007)
- Slang the alleged speech of the peripheries
is used by the center ? the magazine itself - Indeed, it is widely used in
- HEADLINES
- SUBHEADS
- CAPTIONS
- Conversely, it is hardly found in
- QUOTATIONS ? the experts and interviewees
voice - LETTERS ? the readers voice
- BODY OF THE TEXT
5Where is slang?
6Where is slang?
7CosmopolitanSection You, you, you (2007)
- Top five most frequent slang lexemes
- CHICK
- HOT
- BUDDY
- COOL
- PAD
- All basic slang lexemes (Moore 2004)
8Corpus
- TIME Magazine Corpus (1923-2006)
- online, free-access corpus
- mainstream weekly magazine
- interface by Mark Davies (Brigham Young
University)
9Buddy
10Buddy - Collocates
- his
- a/the/Ø
- his adj.
- my
- old adj.
- old
- your
- Army
- bosom
- drinking
- 177
- 172
- 102
- 28
- 27
- 27
- 16
- 15
- 12
- 12
- good
- war/wartime
- your adj.
- their
- wounded
- her
- golf/golfing
- high school
- my adj.
- her adj.
11 10 8 8 7 7 6 6 6 4
16 13 10 5 3
movie system list comedy film
11Buddy as Social Label
- It always describes a male-male(s) bond.
- Only 3.4 of occurrences (1923-2006) has a female
or mixed referent
- IMPOSED LABEL
- (2.5)
- The journalist, or a male third party (e.g. male
interviewee), describes a couple or group of
female or mixed friends as buddies
- SELF-ATTRIBUTED LABEL
- (0.9)
- A female describes her own male or female
friend(s) as buddy/buddies
children love affairs socially inappropriate
behaviors
12Chick
13Chick - Collocates
- a/the/Ø
- Dixie
- white
- this/these
- his
- his adj.
- biker
- hot
- young
- Commando
6 3 2 2
- flick
- lit(erature)
- rock
- thing
14Chick as Social Label
- It always describes a young, clueless, and
attractive woman, although the reference can be
serious, sexist, playful, or critical, according
to the context.
IMPOSED LABEL (78.6) It is often used in movie
summaries to describe a female character, and in
quotes by male third parties (e.g. interviewees).
In 4.8 of cases, a female is imposing the label.
SELF-ATTRIBUTED LABEL (21.4) In the last two
decades, a gradual linguistic riappropriation is
taking place, and sometimes its advocates manage
to participate indirectly in mainstream
discourse(s).
to define her own group
to typecast other women
members of the star system
COSMOPOLITANS FICTIONAL WOMAN
15Concluding Remarks
- STARTING POINT Cosmopolitan 2007
- Chick and buddy are the most frequent slang
lexemes, used by the fictional idealized woman as
imposed (only apparently self-attributed) labels
on real women. - Slang hides a conservative evaluative structure
(Caldas-Coulthard 1999) - THIS STUDY Time Magazine 1923-2006
- Chick and buddy originated within male discourses
and their use has increased through the decades,
also following historical events and cultural
turns. There is some room for linguistic
riappropriation.
16Anna Belladelli
Thank you
- anna.belladelli_at_univr.it
17References
- ADAMS M. (2000), Ephemeral Language, American
Speech, 75(4) 382-384. - CALDAS-COULTHARD C. R. (1999), Women who pay for
sex and enjoy it, in N. COUPLAND and A. JAWORSKI
(eds.) Discourse. London Routledge. 523-540. - EBLE C. (1996), Slang and Sociability. Chapel
Hill and London The University of North Carolina
Press. - FAIRCLOUGH N. (2001 1989), Language and Power.
London Longman. - LIGHTER J. E. (1994), Random House Historical
Dictionary of American Slang. New York Random
House. - MOORE R. L. (2004), Were Cool, Mom and Dad Are
Swell Basic Slang and Generational Shifts in
Values. American Speech, 79(1) 59-86.