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Week 8: Collusion and Socialization

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Title: Week 8: Collusion and Socialization


1
Week 8 Collusion and Socialization
2
Reminders
  • Exam 2 is Tuesday, 10/23
  • Review session Monday, 10/22 at 7 pm in Williams
    402
  • Office hours Monday 10/22 2-3 pm
  • Email me if you would like to be signed up for
    the Quiet Room

3
Language Socialization
4
Acquisition and Socialization
  • Language acquisition refers to the process of a
    child/baby acquiring/learning language for the
    first time
  • Language socialization refers to the process by
    which a child gains communicative competence and
    is socialized into a group through language

5
  • Children are socialized INTO a linguistic and
    cultural system, but children are also socialized
    THROUGH language into social roles and models of
    behavior
  • Examples that show both of these
  • Say thank you to the nice lady.
  • Dont talk with your mouth full!

6
  • Many rules for interaction are not explicitly
    taught. Children learn them through experience.
  • Eye contact
  • Interruption patterns
  • How to get a turn speaking
  • When to stop speaking
  • What topics are discussed and what arent
    discussed, and with whom

7
  • Language acquisition is sometimes treated by
    child development researchers as a mechanical
    process of activating an innate capacity that is
    minimally accessible to cultural influence.
  • BUT culture surrounds child language learning,
    including the significance of learning language,
    rules for appropriate use, and so forth.

8
Becoming Human
  • What is the first question we ask about a
    newborn? Are babies human?
  • Ochs and Schieffelin compare 3 cultures with
    regard to ideas about babies and language
    development (US middle class, Samoa, Kaluli).
  • They show how ideas about language development
    are related to ideas about human development in
    each culture.

9
U.S. White Middle Class
  • Infants are treated as social beings.
  • Child is directly addressed. Caregivers may
    answer for the child.
  • Adults accommodate to children. (e.g. baby talk,
    baby-proofing)

10
Kaluli (Papua New Guinea)
  • Babies are soft and have no understanding
  • Caregivers speak for babies dont modify
    speech much to accommodate
  • Child does not begin to harden until it says
    mother (naw) and breast (bo)

11
Samoan
  • As small infants, babies are talked about, but
    not to until they begin to crawl.
  • Toddlers are called willful and need to be
    disciplined/ordered what to do. Given commands,
    but not expected to talk back
  • First word is widely reported as tae (shit)
    considered assertive
  • Social stratification incorporated into language
    learning a young child asks mother for
    something, mother will say something to older
    sibling. Older sibling will address baby
    teaching social order

12
Developmental Stories
  • Ochs and Schieffelin conclude that each culture
    has its own story about how children develop
  • These stories affect socialization practices.

13
Peer Socialization
  • When children reach the age where they spend a
    lot more time with other children than with
    caregivers, peer socialization becomes more
    important
  • peer socialization refers to how people learn to
    act appropriately for their social group from
    others in a similar social category (often the
    same age group)

14
Peer socialization
  • When children go to school, peers become the main
    vehicle for their socialization into particular
    roles (e.g. developing ideas of being a good
    friend)
  • Child peer groups often span several years at a
    time (through siblings, neighborhood friends,
    etc.) allowing for games and verbal art to be
    passed down from generation to generation.

15
Film Esther Shea
  • Esther Shea The Bear Stands Up
  • About a Tlingit woman who is working to
    revitalize her language and culture. Language
    revitalization refers to attempts to increase or
    maintain the number of speakers of an endangered
    or moribund language.
  • As you watch the film ask What historical
    processes have contributed to this language
    situation? How does Esther Shea link
    socialization and language learning/use?

16
Discussion
  • Where did you see examples of collusion?
  • Can groups get around colluding with the dominant
    society?
  • Is collusion bad or good? Does it conflict with
    American values of individuality and the right
    to self-determination?

17
Politeness
18
Politeness 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

19
Positive 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.

20
Positive Politeness examples
  • You look nice today!
  • Its always such a pleasure to see you.
  • What an honor to finally meet you.
  • More examples?

21
Negative 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?

22
Politeness 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

23
Positive 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

24
Negative 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. Anything to help out.
  • 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
    Bob is swamped with the Anderson account.
  • Oh, okay.

25
Conversational Structure
26
Does conversation have structure?
  • For many years, linguists dismissed
    conversational speech as messy and
    unstructured
  • Then came the portable tape recorder
  • Findings Each SPEECH COMMUNITY has its own
    rules for how a conversation should be run, e.g.
    how you signal that you are done speaking or
    that you want a turn at speaking.

27
Structural Properties of Conversation
  • One thing children must learn as they learn
    language is how conversation is socially
    structured
  • who speaks when, whether interruption is allowed,
    how to answer or ask a question, how long to
    speak, etc.

28
Conversational Turns
  • Conversation is structured through turn-taking.
  • Turn-taking who takes a turn to speak, when?
  • Features of turns that are contextually
    sensitive
  • length of turn
  • content of turn
  • Holding the floor keep the right to speak
  • Take the floor take on the role of speaker
  • Yield the floor let someone else speak

29
The Floor
  • The floor refers to having the floor, in
    other words, having the right to speak (comes
    from parliamentary speaking)
  • You can gain, take, turn over, or hold
    the floor by successfully signaling to
    participants that you want to speak you can
    lose the floor if you arent successful.

30
American Turn-taking (Sacks)
  • Speaker change occurs
  • one party talks at a time
  • overlaps are brief
  • ideal transition involves no gap and no overlap
  • Note that this is typical of male
    speech
  • turn allocation techniques are used
  • speaker select What do you think, Joe?
  • self-select I know all about that.

31
But
  • Sacks focused on WHITE MALE MIDDLE CLASS speakers
    to construct his model.
  • Other research has shown that different groups
    encourage gaps and/or overlaps in everyday
    conversation.

32
Conversational Structure
  • Conversational structure was first studied by
    sociologists interested in interpersonal dynamics
    (1960s)
  • This developed into a subfield of
    sociolinguistics called Conversation Analysis
  • Scholars soon found a number of identifiable
    structures that are common in conversation

33
Adjacency Pairs
  • Adjacency pairs are pairs of turns that go
    together using one prompts the other.
  • - Guess what?
  • What!
  • Christ is risen.
  • Indeed he is risen. Easter greeting
  • Would you like something to drink?
  • Yes please. (No thanks.)

34
Presequences
  • Presequences are sequences that signal or set up
    the expectation of another type of exchange
  • Do you have a minute? pre-request
  • - Sure, whats up?
  • - I wanted to run something by you.
  • Guess what? (signals information coming)
  • Youre going to have twins
  • No, doofus, I got an A on the test
  • pre-invitation (signals an invitation coming)
  • Are you busy tonight?

35
Entering and exiting
  • Turn entry devices are recognized ways of taking
    a turn at speaking
  • Well. You know what? But No, really
  • Turn exit devices are recognized ways of ending
    your turn and getting the other person to speak
  • Its hot in here, isnt it? (tag question)
  • What do you think about all this?
  • - I guess it just goes to show that theres no
    pleasing some people.

36
Backchannel cues
  • Little cues that show the listener is engaged,
    but that dont have literal meaning
  • Examples
  • Uh-huh, mmm, no way!, right, exactly
  • Or my favorite Shut up!
  • Miscommunication can occur when the backchannel
    cues you use are interpreted as definite
    agreement in another speech community

37
Closings
  • A set of turns that result in closing down or
    ending a topic of conversation or the
    conversation itself.
  • Usually closings cross several conversational
    turns

38
Example telephone closing
  • D Uh-you know, its just like bringin the
    blood up.
  • T Yeah, well, things uh always work out for the
    best. pre-closing convo summary
  • D Oh certainly. Alright Tess.
  • T Uh huh. (pause) Okay.
  • D Gbye
  • T Goodnight.

39
Collusion and repair
  • Repair refers to fixing an error while you or
    someone else is speaking collusion allows you
    to keep going and ignore the error most of the
    time
  • Self-repair
  • I saw her on Tues- on Wednesday.
  • Other-repair
  • I think hes from Buchapest
  • You mean Bucharest.

40
Why have structure in conversation?
  • Conversation is a series of adjustments to how
    the other person is interpreting what you say.
  • Unless you think they are understanding what you
    mean, it is difficult to move the conversation
    forward

41
Pragmatic cues allow us to take short cuts
  • One theory says that conversation is all about
    making things relevant. We interpret utterances
    so that they are relevant. Conversational
    structure helps.
  • - Im flying Air China to Bali
  • - Whats the connection?
  • - Its a Buddhist studies group.

42
Make it relevant
  • Relevance can help us interpret indirect speech
  • Are you going on vacation this year?
  • I dont have any money.
  • Without relevance, we have trouble making even an
    indirect connection
  • Are you going on vacation this year?
  • My favorite color is yellow.

43
Socializing Coherence
  • Children need to learn how to be relevant and
    also how to signal relevance and coherence in
    storytelling and conversation.
  • Examples include
  • Constructing a culturally coherent timeline
  • Signaling causality (thats why then because
    of that)
  • Including necessary information at appropriate
    times
  • Linking information together (e.g. The cover
    charge was 20 SO he went home.)

44
Coherence and Social Change
  • Agar talks about cultural frames and how they can
    limit how we talk about or understand certain
    things.
  • Often social changes go hand in hand with the
    emergence of new vocabulary and even new
    grammatical and conversational structures that
    allow us to speak about new things or address
    them in new ways.

45
Knowing the rules
  • Why would it be important to know which of these
    is going on in an American context? How might
    you be able to tell?
  • Is it a costume party or a formal?
  • Is it a conversation or a lecture?
  • Is the speaker serious or joking?

46
Cross-linguistic variation
  • Pragmatic cues and rules vary a great deal across
    cultures and speech communities.
  • What do you say when you pick up the phone?
  • Do you greet people when you see them in the
    hallway?
  • Is it appropriate to have a conversation with a
    salesperson?
  • Are you supposed to talk about your
    accomplishments or not?

47
Variation
  • In U.S.
  • We answer the phone Hello?
  • Preference is for speaker recognition, Hi, its
    me.
  • In Netherlands
  • Answer the phone with Hello first name
  • Preference is for speaker self-identification

48
Think about it
  • When people DO share conversational structures,
    then they can often get locked in to them.
  • Example A student walks into lecture half an
    hour late and I say. Hello, nice of you to join
    us.
  • How have I trapped the student?
  • Why do (some of) you feel uncomfortable?
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