Title: Sociolinguistics
1Sociolinguistics
- I. Inter-relationships between linguistic form
and social function - II. What should linguistics study?
- III. The difficulty of defining what language is
- IV. Social functions of speech
- V. Telephone conversation
- VI. Compliments
- VII Language gender
2I . Inter-relationships between linguistic form
and social function (1)
- Lang. cannot be studied separately from its
social/speech context. - 9 Sentences note still related to
psycholinguisticswhat? - Should I make some tea?
- Would you like some tea?
- Can I make you a cup of tea?
- Lets have a cup of tea.
- How about a nice cup of tea?
- I could make you a cup of tea.
- Do you drink tea?
- Have some tea.
- Theres tea in the pot.
3I. Inter-relationships between linguistic form
and social function (2)
- What are these sentences doing?
- When, and with whom, would each one be
appropriate? - From these examples, would you say that
linguistic form and social function are
unrelated? Should we study them separately? - Interaction between psycholinguistics and
sociolinguistics - Rhetorical expressiveness
- For social needsaffects formaffects other
psychological pressures
4I . Inter-relationships between linguistic form
and social function (3)
- Mandarin examples
- ?, ?,??
- ??,??
- ??,??
- Sex
- Chairman, chair(person)
- Geographical origin
- Phonological variant
- Northern Taiwanese vs. southern Taiwanese
- Examples of Taiwanese spoken in I-lan
5II. What should linguistics study? (1)
- Grammar only (the structure/form of language)
- to discover the rules of language x and thus
universal rules - Studies following this view often use idealized
datathink up some sentences and then study
themnative speaker intuition - Problems
- Speech is social behavior and has many social
functions. Do these two factors have no
influence on linguistic rules? - What is language x? How do we define what one
language is? - whats the language x?
- people who
language spoken - Speak language x
by people x - who are people x?
6II. What should linguistics study? (2)
- What is a native speaker?
- Social functions/factors, too
- Questions like these (see above) led to
development of a major counter view to the view
of grammar only - Speech is a form of social behavior language
must be related to and interact with society. - Definition of sociolinguistics
- The study of language in relation to society
- Sociolinguistics is a branch of linguistics which
studies all aspects of the relationship between
language and society - Sociolinguistics deals with the
inter-relationships between language and society - The study of the properties of language which
require social factors in their explanation.
7II. What should linguistics study? (3)
- Functions of language
- Communication
- Social identity
- Definition of a language really depends on how
speakers of the language look at it theyre
often making social, cultural, and political
distinguish. Therefore, a language is usually
defined politically, socially/culturally, not by
its linguistic form. - Example of Chinese
8III. The difficulty of defining what one
language is (1)
- Mutual intelligibility ? the same language.
- Are people speaking the same language if they
understand each other? - Scandinavia
-
87 - Norwegian 76
Swedish - 42
-
- 72
18
23 - Danish
-
- Related to linguistic distance structural
similarity and also to informants attitudes
towards the other groups and with the degree of
perceived beauty of the lang. in question. - So, mutual intelligibility cant be used to
define a language. -
Number of informants who claimed to understand
their neighbors lang. fairly easily on 1st
encounter
9III. The difficulty of defining what one
language is (2)
- Dutch and German
- Go village to village from coast of Holland to
Vienna, Austria ? always find mutual
intelligibility between adjacent communities, but
not between the start and end points - Romance languages (Spanish, Portuguese, French,
Italian) - Same language? ? no body would say yes, BUT they
share common writing system, some common history,
culture, and are next to each other
geographically - Potato joke
- Spanish vs. Italian
10III. The difficulty of defining what one
language is (3)
- Hindi vs. Urdu
- Linguistically similar
- Religiously, Hindi is identified with Hindu
Urdu with Moslem. - Same language or not really depends on the people
of the language ? what they think, which in
return depends on something social/cultural and
political
11III. The difficulty of defining what one
language is (4)
- Same language ? mutual intelligibility
- (ex1) one language (ex2)
one original language -
- dialect dialect dialect
different languages - e.g., 1 one language (mutual intelligibility?
same nation? same language?) - Chinese (Taiwanese, Cantonese, Shanghai,
Shandung, Mandarin, etc.) - e.g., 2 one original language
- the Romance situation (sharing a common writing
system, culture, history next to each other
geographically) - Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, French, etc..
12III. The difficulty of defining what one
language is (5)
- How to define native speakers?
- Northwest Amazon (basin between Brazil
Venezuela) - 20 different tribes, each with a different
language - All are exogamous, so a mans wife must speak a
different language - Marriage is patrilocal, and a wife must speak the
husbands language to their children - Most people here are multilingual
- Who can the linguist get to be her native
speaker informant? - Conclusion to define a language, we have many
factors (social, cultural, political, linguistic,
etc.)
13IV. Social functions of speech
- Communication
- Communicative pressures can influence the rules
(form) of language. - Quick easy? contractions
- Rhetorically expressive? more complex forms (in
order to carry out different intentions by being
able to express one meaning in many ways e.g.,
Tok Pisin) - Identification
- of other people
- of self
14Identification of Other People
- geographic/national/ethnic
- social class
- people education
- professional group
occupation - role (at any time)
- Role -teacher
Role (students) - (myself) professor
-student - -wife
-big sister - -daughter
-younger person - -little sister to elder sister
-responsible adult - -elder sister
-girlfriend - -sister-in-law
-tutor - -friend
- Each of these roles may have sub roles, too.
15Identification of Self
- groups you belong
to - education
- Self occupation
- geographic
- role at any one
time - Sometimes, social pressure override psychological
pressures - Children talk as their models
- parents ( other siblings)
- peers
- adults
16V. Telephone conversation (1)
- Telephone openings (Emanuel Schegloff 1968)
- basic structure of conversation ab, ab, ab
- How what is said is determined socially.? a
social structure to lang. - Problem 1 how can we get the conversation
going? How do we get into the structure? How
do we begin a conversation guarantee ourselves
a further turn later on in the conversation? - Basic structure of telephone openings
- summons- answer sequences
- Summons Answer
- T1 Question Answer
- T2 (raise
topic) A structure of -
T3 obligations and rights -
between two people
17V. Telephone conversation (2)
- Adjacency pair (coordinated pair)
- Definition Many acts require replies of specific
kinds and put the hearer under a conversational
obligation to provide them. - Examples summons-answer Q-A greeting-greeting
offer-acceptance/refusal thanks-acknowledgement
apology-acceptance (refusal) - Why does the answerer always speak first instead
of the caller (since he doesnt know to whom hes
speaking and hes not the one who wants to
initiate a conversation)?
18V. Telephone conversation (3)
- Viewing the ring as a nonlinguistic realization
of a callers summoning act solves the problem.
? adjacency pair - Phone ring summons of caller ? answer of
answerer - Now, lets take a closer look at telephone
openings (see handout, Figure 1)
19V. Telephone conversation (4)
- Turn 2 A case of an utterance realizing more
than one act. - Another general rule those who initiate
conversations have the right to raise the topic,
and answerer has the obligation to listen. ?Turn
3 or after Turn 3 (caller) - A conversational social relationship in which
participants have strong obligations to each
other by virtue of the conventions governing
conversation itself. These conventions make
smooth coordinated openings possible.
20V. Telephone conversation (5)
- Identification on telephone
- Problem 2 how to achieve mutual recognition?
- Preferred method of identification involves the
minimum use of recognitional resources. - oversuppose and undertell
- Identification becomes problematic on telephone.
Why? (see handout, Figure 2) - Two identification problems (on telephone)
- Caller identifies Answerer
- Answerer identifies Caller
- TA T1 T2
T3 - ring Hello? Tom?
Yeah, Bill - summons answer voice ID of other
- Q clue
voice clue to self - (ID yourself)
21V. Telephone conversation (6)
- recognition
- identification
- Tel. opening
- summons -- answer
- question -- answer
happening at the same time, just as adjacency
pairs of the tel. opening
22V. Telephone conversation (7)
- e.g.1 Ring summons
- answerer T1 Hello? answer/question (ID
resource oblige caller to ID) - caller T2 Hi greeting
(claim of ID an answer to the Q) - answer T3 Hi greeting (claim
of ID complete greeting) - e.g.2 Ring
summons - answerer T1 Hello?
answer/question (provide ID resource - caller T2 Hello, Jenny.
greeting/claim of ID/oblige--resource - (pause)
failure by A to recognize C - This is Paul.
provide more resource - answerer T3 Oh, hello, Paul.
greeting/claim of ID
23V. Telephone conversation (8)
- e.g.3 Answerer T1 Hello?
- Caller T2 Connie?
- Answerer T3 Yeah, John.
- e.g.4 Variation
- A T1 Hello?
- C T2 Connie?
- A T3 Oh, hi. How are you?
24Language Society
- There is a social structure to language.
- Basic structure of conversation ab, ab, ab.
- What is said and how it is said is determined
socially. - in the tel. openings discussed earlier
- An utterance is a complex of actions.
- (tel. openings) Hello?
25VI. Complimentsgiving compliments (I)
- Giving compliments two studies in New Zealand
U.Sby women examined status age, sex,
syntactic patterns, topics - Status and age
- Most commonly the receiver is the same status
age as the speaker. - Sex (gender)
- Women to women most frequent
- Women to men
(descending frequency) - Men to women
- Men to men least frequent
26VI. Complimentsgiving compliments (II)
- Syntactic patterns
- Three major patterns (about 80 of all
compliments collected) - NP be/look (intensifier) ADJ You look really
nice. - ADJ includes nice, good, beautiful, pretty,
great, wonderful, lovely (This set 2/3 of all
ADJ used in data). - I (intensifier) like/ love NP I really like that
skirt. - VERB includes like, love. enjoy, admire, be
impressed by - PRO be (intensifier) (a) ADJ NP Thats really a
nice coat. - Formulaic (or conventional) Language a very
limited subset of English sentence structure and
vocabulary (and topics) is used to give
compliments.
27VI. Complimentsgiving compliments (III)
- Topics
- Appearance
- clothes, hairdo (results of deliberate effort)
- Ability (skill)/performance
- a well-done job, a skillfully played game, a good
meal - Personality/friendship
- That was kind.
- Possessions
- I like your new bike.
70
28VI. Complimentsresponding (I)
- Responding to compliments
- What compliments do?
- Two types of action simultaneously
- Supportive action an offer, congratulations, a
gift - Thats a good idea.
- Assessment saying something which is supposed to
be taken as TURE like a remark, assertion,
statement. - Thats really a nice coat.
- Three social norms (rules)
- 1. Accept supportive action
- 2. Accept truth of assessment
- 3. Avoid self-praise
29VI. Complimentsresponding (II)
- Why is it difficult to respond to compliments?
- Must consider the three social norms
- If your response follows norms 1 2, it
conflicts with norm 3 (at least potentially). - If you agree, it amounts to self-praise.
- If you disagree, it threatens both you the
complimenters. - It means you reject their supportive act and say
that what they said is NOT TRUE. - It also means you have to say or imply bad things
about yourself.
30VI. Complimentsresponding (III)
- Some conventional, formulaic responses
- In Eng. Thank you in Chinese ??,??
- Other types of solutions
- accept by agreeing A Your dress is very nice.
- B
Yeah, this is my favorite dress. - reject by disagreeing (indirect/implicit
rejection) - A You did a great job cleaning the house.
- B Well, I guess you havent seen the kids
room. - other in-between responses
- Scale down (agree, with reservations)
- Transfer
- Return to the speaker
31Examples of Other in-between Responses
- Scale Down (compliment of hearers new bride)
- e.g.1 A Shes a real fox.
- B Yeah, shes a pretty woman.
- e.g. 2 A You broughtlike a ton of things.
- B Just a few little things.
- e.g. 3 A This is a really good paper.
- B Yeah, there are still a few parts that
need work, though. - Transfer
- A Thats a nice sweater.
- B Do you like it? My mother bought it for me.
- Return to the Speaker
- A Thats a nice sweater.
- B Yours is new, too, isnt it? That color really
suits you.
32Reasons for giving compliments
- If compliments are so hard to respond to why give
them? - Solidarity (another norm Speaker should
express solidarity with hearer, and raise the
hearers status when possible.) - Encouragement
- Expression of gratitude
- Compliment preceding and thus softening a
criticism
33Language and Gender (1)
- Lang. Sex
- Sex differences in language
- Sexism in language
- Deborah Tannens two books
- Thats Not What I Meant (1986) conversational
stylesmore in general - You Just Dont Understand Women and Men in
Conversation (1990)new approach conversational
style differences 1 national bestseller
34Language and Gender (2)
- Different norms for the conversational styles of
women and men - Women focus on connection (solidarity), so
- intimacy is the key (so value the
telling of details.) - Men focus on status ( so independence, the
key) - Although different norms, neither is wrong or
worse, or etc. - But, it means women and men often talk at
cross-purposes (without realizing it).
35Language and Gender (3)
- Conclusion
- Women Rapport talk (trouble talk)recount
their trouble, and expect sympathy,
understanding, affirmation, but not a solution. - Men Report talk (solution talk)exhibiting
knowledge and skill, holding center stage thus
storytelling, joking, or imparting information. - Cause asymmetrical situation, resulting in some
arguments. - (You Just Dont Understand by D. Tannen,
1990.)
36Language and Gender (4)
- Examples (Tannen 1990)
- p. 24 wife and husband in different cities
- p. 30 asking boss about chances for promotion
- p. 51 women frustrated because men dont respond
to their trouble by offering matching troubles - p. 113 the power of details (men details of
politics, news, sports women details of
personal lives), the joy of involvement - Remember these are generalizations.
37Language and Gender (5)
- Language differences due to social expectation
(Nash 29) - Pronunciation and words used
- Language forms
- Sexism in language prejudice against women
- Male terms precede female terms
- Male terms used to refer to people in general
- Feminine words formed from masculine words
- Negative meaning in feminine words