Title: Weeks 9 and 10
1Weeks 9 and 10
- Politeness
- Mock Language
- Social Stratification
- Language Ideologies
- Frames
2Politeness
3Politeness across cultures
- Polite behavior varies across cultures
- Can be embedded in language use (e.g. use of
proper pronouns or names) - Politeness is usually about showing respect in
different ways
4Positive vs. Negative Politeness
- Positive politeness oriented towards a persons
desire to be well regarded - Negative politeness oriented towards a persons
desire not be imposed upon.
5Positive Politeness examples
- You look nice today!
- Its always such a pleasure to see you.
- What an honor to finally meet you.
- More examples?
6Negative Politeness examples
- I know youre really busy, but could you take a
look at this? - Could you do me a big favor?
- Someone needs to organize this project and
produce the pamphlet. (indirectness) - More examples?
7Politeness and collusion
- In order to make many situations go forward, you
must be polite. - BUT being polite often involves placing yourself
in a certain role in the hierarchy. - In order to be polite and grease the wheels of
social interaction, you may have to take on the
role of someone in a lower position
8Positive Politeness and collusion
- By accepting positive politeness, you are
colluding in the idea of what constitutes a
compliment (in other words, what it means in your
culture to be well regarded.) - Example A Korean woman told an American
acquaintance I havent seen you in so long! You
look fat! and was slapped in the face.
collusion broke down
9Negative Politeness and Collusion
- Many examples of negative politeness include
being indirect, but also accepting that there is
some exaggeration going on, and also recognizing
whether you are in a position to turn down a
request. - Can I ask you for a big favor?
- Yes, of course.
- I know youre really busy, but can I ask you for
a favor? - Sorry, I really am too busy.
- Oh, uh. Well, I really need you to do it, since
Jan is swamped with another account. - Oh, okay.
10Language Ideology
11Language ideology
- Language ideology includes ideas about and
attitudes towards language, including evaluations
of language use and ideas about what language
represents or does for people.
12Examples of lang. ideologies
- There is a right way and a wrong way to speak a
language (ideology about language use/intent) - Speakers of non-standard dialects are lazy and
dont try to speak right (ideology about
users) - Some languages are more appropriate for some
things (like running the government, or prayer)
than for others (ideologies about language use) - A written promise is more binding than a spoken
promise (ideologies about written and spoken
language) - If someone says bad things about you, it can make
you sick (ideology about the power of language to
act in the world)
13There isnt ONE ideology
- Language ideology is a concept that describes how
a speech communitys ideas about language
influence how members of that community use
language and interpret language use - Although everyone might have their own ideas
about language, certain language ideologies, such
as the idea in the US that only one language can
represent a country, are more widespread and
influential than others
14Where is ideology?
- Everywhere!
- In self-help magazines, on TV, in everyday jokes
and discussions with friends - Language ideology is in how a professor corrects
your text, how your parents correct your speech,
and in your opinions about whether hate speech
should be illegal
15Social difference and ideology
- Language ideologies help link particular
linguistic characteristics to other stereotypical
characteristics of speakers - For example, if your dialect is lazy, are you
lazy? - If your dialect is uneducated are you
uneducated?
16Mock Language
- A mock language is a representation of one
language inside another. - Mock languages are mini-registers that are used
to represent a foreign language (in the online
reserve article, Jane Hill uses the term Junk
language) - The mini-register might include intonations,
morphology, or vocabulary words that represent
the whole language, often reflecting language
attitudes.
17Jane Hill asks
- Where is the line between not having a sense of
humor and being aware of how humor perpetuates
and reinforces language stereotypes?
18Hills argument
- Using material from the Southwest like greeting
cards and souvenirs, Hill notes how Spanish
speakers are identified as dirty, lazy,
uneducated in popular media - How does mock Spanish work?
- Mock Spanish uses humor to mask that we are
colluding in negative, racist stereotypes of
Spanish speakers. Example Fleas navidad.
19Features of Mock Spanish
- Spanish is funny
- Spanish is used to designate cheap things
- Spanish is used to designate bad (low) things
(e.g. nada el cheapo) - Grammatical and pronunciation errors in
translating e.g. no problemo Muchas grassyass
Fleas navidad
20Socializing mock languages
- Excerpts from the Muppets
- The Swedish Chef
- Spanish dance
- Conversation between Kermit and Miss Piggy
21Mock Language meanings/features
- Swedish?
- Spanish?
- French?
- Linguistic stereotypes are a form of collusion
they are a shorthand for stereotypes about
speakers of a language that allow us to get the
joke.
22Judging Mock Language
- At the level of what are we doing in language
mini-registers based on other languages are
pretty cool! - At the level of politics Can being aware of the
meaning and effects of linguistic stereotypes
help change them?
23Joking and Social Cohesion
- Performance, test, and mutual revelation
- A joke is a performance, it tests the teller and
the audience for comprehension and skill, and
they must reveal to each other whether or not
they understood the joke and found it funny.
24Joking structures
- Structured knock-knock lightbulb
- Set-up and punchline
- Funny story
- riffs or wordplay in conversation
25http//www.laughlab.co.uk/summary.html
- Men seem to like jokes that involve sexuality or
put-downs, esp. of women - Women prefer jokes that use wordplay such as puns
26Nevins article on Apache
- Focuses on the White Mountain Apache (E. Arizona)
language revitalization - Explores cultural conflict between two different
ideologies of teaching - How is this conflict affecting language
revitalization programs?
27Description of Community
- High rate of adult bilingualism in English/Apache
- Apache widely used in different settings, ranging
from ceremonial, to everyday (work, offices,
social conversations) - Apache is one of the two official tribal
languages required for tribal council members
28Two ideologies of language
- Apache pedagogical ideology - emphasizes Apache
cultural values of speaking, based on a model of
intergenerational, family-based learning - Endangered language ideology based on ideas of
Apache as a national language, with
learning/revitalization programs based in
institutional settings (schools, govt)
29Two types of authority
- Traditional authority Apache elders
traditionally hold places of authority in the
home and are seen as linguistic and cultural
authorities - Institutional authority trained linguists and
educators have institutional authority in schools
and government-sponsored revitalization programs
that produce educational materials and
dictionaries, grammars and so forth.
30Ideologies in conflict
- What does it mean to know Apache?
- When language is taught, should it be taught in a
correct institutional form or in the way it is
actually used by fluent speakers? - Does using materials like computers and books
undermine the linguistic authority of elders and
traditional learning methods?
31Broadening revitalization
- Nivens does not recommend eliminating
school-based educational programs - Instead, she argues that paying attention to how
communities understand language loss and language
teaching can help develop programs that promote
culturally-based learning on many levels.
32Native Languages in the US
- http//www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?nameUS
A - http//www.census.gov/population/socdemo/race/indi
an/ailang3.txt
33Social Stratification
34Social Stratification
- Social stratification is the hierarchical
structuring of groups within a society,
reflecting inequalities among sectors of a
population. - In general, social differences are mirrored in
linguistic differences (such as dialect
differences between classes or castes)
35Social Dialect
- Social dialect (sociolect) A variety of a
language spoken by a group of people who are
identified by some social characteristics,
usually social class.
36Why do language and social stratum match up? (2
theories)
- We talk like the people we talk to the most.
- We tend to talk like family members, the people
we went to school with, friends and co-workers of
the same rank. - We talk like the people we identify with.
- People who move out of their community into
another one may adopt the dialect of the new
community to reflect their new identity
37Class and Caste
- Attributes combined in socioeconomic class
include income, occupation, and education - Caste refers to a ranked social group into which
you are born. Castes often are linked to
particular professions, and usually have
different vocabulary or speech patterns
associated with them.
38Language and class
- Language use both reflects and reinforces class
differences - Example from Ottenheimer pg. 212-214
- r sounds in English sometimes r-deletion or
r-lessness is a sign of middle or upper-class
speech, sometimes a sign of lower-class speech.
r-insertion is also associated with the speech
of different classes. Also, these associations
can and do change over time.
39Excerpt from Do you speak American
- R-less dialects in major northern US cities
- Influenced by British English
- Example of FDR from NYC
- In FDRs speech, r is pronounced only before
vowels - Changed after WWII American standard now
pronounces r and many r-less dialects are
considered lower class
40Language and Caste
- In caste-based societies, different castes often
have different accents - The higher castes speak a more prestigious form,
the lower castes speak a less prestigious form
that is often considered uneducated
41Class vs. Social network
- Class approach is based on differences across the
layers of society. Theory People talk
differently because of difference - Network analysis approach focuses on how people
in one layer are similar to each other. Theory
People talk similarly because of similarity
42Labovs work in NYC
- Key study in sociolinguistics
- Focus on the r-less dialects of NYC
- Lower East side, had people of different classes
(all white) speak in different situations from
least to most formal - casual, careful speech, reading , word lists,
minimal pairs (dock/dark)
43Crossover pattern
- When members of the least secure Lower Middle
Class got to the reading lists part, they put
in even more rs than the people in the class
above them due to being self-conscious of their
speech. - This created a crossover pattern in the graph
of how many rs are pronounced
44(No Transcript)
45Interesting note
- Labov found that crossover occurred ONLY for
sounds that were in fluctuation - For items that were not changing, there was no
crossover - Conclusion the Lower Middle Class are trying to
catch up to the more prestigious speech of the
Upper Middle Class.
46Spooky language
47Magical Language
- Bronislaw Malinowski
- The coefficient of weirdness
- Magical and supernatural language must be
strange in order to have power
48Ways to be Weird
- Unnatural pitch/vocal qualities
- Screaming/lack of vocal control
- Loss of coherence
- Nonsense words
- Special codes
- Use of profanity
49Collusion and weirdness
- When people act outside the bounds of normal
language, it can threaten our sense of stability
and order - At the same time, weird language
characteristics can function as pragmatic cues
that allow us to recognize particular genres of
spooky language use
50Supernatural
- What does a supernatural voice sound like in
America? - What languages are considered supernatural? Why?
- What elements of linguistic weirdness are
incorporated into our ideas of the supernatural?
51Quotation and possession
- How do we make it clear when we are saying
someone elses words? - When we act out another persons words, we are
on the edge of weird language
52Glossolalia
- Speaking in tongues
- Experiments have shown that speaking in tongues
can be a learned behavior 70 of people who
received coaching were able to speak in tongues - Speaking in tongues is a sacred register that is
part of the communicative repertoire of certain
religious groups learning to speak in tongues
is part of being socialized into that religion
53Socializing Glossolalia
- Excerpt from Jesus Camp
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vzqNLMuijRyU
54Exorcism
- Evidence for possession comes in part from speech
irregularities (cursing weird vocal qualities
lack of coherence strange code use) - Exorcism is in part a linguistic ritual at the
end, the person returns to linguistic and
physical normalcy
55Strange Frames
- How are language, dress, music, body movements
and other aspects of ritual combined to create a
FRAME around a strange cultural space?
56Library Assignment
57Library Assignment Due 11/15
- Choose a topic related to linguistic anthro
- Find and type out citations (see sheet) for 3
scholarly journal articles on that topic - Locate the full text of one article in the
library or via an online database - Write a short essay comparing that article to one
article from our course (online reading or a
chapter from a textbook)
58Library presentation Laurie Kutner
- Librarians in the reference area will have copies
of the assignment and can help you find materials
and answer your questions - There is a library resource page for this course
assignment. The address is on the assignment and
there is a link to it from our assignment webpage
at - http//www.uvm.edu/jadickin/28assignments.html
59More on social stratification
60Another example
- In Glasgow, the glottal stop (buer not butter)
- is a stigmatized linguistic variable
- BUT it appears in speech of people of all
classes. The connection between this variable
and class is that higher up the socioeconomic
ladder you go, the less it is used.
61Vernacular Loyalty
- Study by Jenny Cheshire in Reading, England
- Use of vernacular markers like we has, a knob
what you turn I come down here - Vernacular loyalty is a measure of how much
your identity is bound up with a subculture and
the dialect associated with that subculture - The vernacular loyalty of the speaker to
subculture corresponded (e.g. as measured in
terms of to how much the speaker used these
markers across situations
62Results
- Good girls used the fewest vernacular markers
- Some vernacular markers seemed to fluctuate
depending on where the speakers were (school or
playground) - These fluctuating markers were most closely
linked to how loyal a person was to the
subculture
63Social stratification and language ideology
64Standard Language
- A standard language is a WRITTEN variety of a
language whose features have been formalized.
This form of the language is used in print. - A standard language ideology says that the
written standard is also the standard to which
speech should be compared to determine if it is
correct or not.
65Standard language ideology
- The belief that there is one and only one correct
spoken form of the language, modeled on a single
correct written form.
66Social Stratification and Power
- What determines which dialect is the most
prestigious? - The people who have the most power also have the
most correct language. - There is no linguistic way to determine which
dialect is best, this is purely a social
determination based on who speaks which language,
and what language ideologies are applied when
judging languages or varieties.
67Frames
68Frames (Agar 130-9)
- Frames are shared understandings of a given
situation. Knowing the frame of an interaction
allows us to act and react appropriately - For example Things said in a joking frame
should not be taken too seriously, or you will
break the frame
69Frames and Culture
- Agar says that culture provides frames of
reference that make sense out of cultural
knowledge and behaviors. - Frames place limits on how far culture can be
bent before you are not acting within the bounds
of that culture.
70How do frames work?
- a frame is a culturally understood speech
situation that is defined by certain features. - Example A lecture frame is defined by the
physical orientation of the participants to each
other, and by the turn-taking and turn-allocation
patterns
71What do you need to know about language to get
this joke?
- Why do women live longer than men?
- Men get tired of the complaining and give
up.
72Opening and Closing Frames
- opening Okay everyone, lets get started
- closing Okay, thats it for today.
- opening The weirdest thing happened to me
today - closing I mean, isnt that crazy?
73Example Rap battles
- MC says Kick that shit
- Super MC in the house!
- Yo, yo
- Rap
- Closing gives up mike
- Note that the social rules that apply within a
frame are different than might apply in a regular
conversational frame.
74Breaking a frame
- Frames can be broken if you step out of what
you are doing - For example, youre reading Hamlets soliloquy
and you stop and say Wait, how do you pronounce
that?
75What do frames do for us?
- Frames help us click into the right set of
responses for the type of interaction were
having. - We might know more about what register to use,
rules about eye contact and touching, etc.
76A final point
- As Agar points out, registers shift along with
frames, and when we are in different frames, we
are mobilizing different aspects of our identity. - The chapter on Variations on a Frame focuses on
language variation, and how different social
groups use different frames of reference to make
sense of the world.
77Strange Frames
- How are language, dress, music, body movements
and other aspects of ritual combined to create a
FRAME around a strange cultural space?
78Next week
- Language and race in the US
- African American English