Title: Social and Ethnic Dialects
1Social and Ethnic Dialects
- Wolfram Schilling-Estes
- Chapter 6
2Emergence of Social Dialectology
- Attitudes toward regional differences
- Attitudes toward linguistic variation associated
with social status (sociolects) and ethnic
identity (ethnolects)
36.1 Defining Class (social status)
- Social class distinctions based upon status and
power Guy (1988) - status amount of respect or deference accorded
to a person - power the social and material resources a
person can command - Linguistic Atlas Approach Types I, II and III
(based on level of education and breadth of
social contacts) - Socioeconomic Status (SES)
- Traditional approach
- Set of objectified socioeconomic characteristics
- Typically occupation, level of education,
income, type of residential dwelling - Critiques
- Oriented to particular groups of speakers
- Whose judgment? (insider versus outsider)
- Agreement with regard to norms? (consensus model
versus conflict model) - American attitudes toward class
46.2 Beyond Social Class
- How to combine both objective and subjective
measures appropriately? - Complicating factors region, age, gender.
- The notion of the linguistic marketplace (a
persons economic activity, broadly defined, is
associated with language variation) and a
persons linguistic market index (e.g. teacher,
sales rep) - Local considerations versus macro-level social
categorizations - Social network, Community of Practice
- Matters of identity and personal presentation
56.3 The Patterning of Social Differences in
Language
- Group exclusive/Group preferential
- Inherent variability (?n/??
- Social constraints on variability Different
linguistic variables may align with given social
status groupings in a variety of ways (e.g.,
African-American community in Detroit, MI)
(text, pp. 175-177) - Sharp stratification
- for third person sing. s/-es absence (typical
for grammatical variables) - Gradient or fine stratification
- for postvocalic R absence
66.4 Linguistic Constraints on Variability
- Sometimes referred to as independent (but see
chart on p. 181 that shows social influence) - Example consonant cluster reduction
- The characteristics of the following word
- west coast vs. west end
- cold cuts vs. cold egg
- The characteristics of the cluster
- single morpheme guest
- suffix guessed
7Constraints on Variability
- Both social and linguistic
- Both qualitative and quantitative
- Interpretation of Table 6.2, p.181, concerning
relative influence - SE and AWC show greater difference in of
reduction in relation to following consonant - SEAWC and SAAWC show greater difference in of
reduction in relation to cluster type
86.5 The Social Evaluation of Linguistic Features
- Linguistic description versus social valuation
- Socially prestigious variants associated with
high-status groups - rare
- Socially stigmatized variants associated with
low-status groups - abundant
9The importance of the axis of stigmatization
- Standard English is more adequately
characterized by the absence of negatively-
valued, stigmatized items than by the presence of
positively valued, prestige items. refer back
to categories of dialect, p. 16 - It is important to understand that stigmatized
and prestigious variants to not exist on a single
axis in which the alternative to a socially
stigmatized variant is a socially prestigious
one, or vice versa. The absence of multiple
negation, for example, is not particularly
prestigious it is simply not stigmatized. (p.
183) - The popular notion that speakers who use
stigmatized variants always use these variants
and those who use prestige variants always use
these forms is simply not true.
10Types of Prestige
- Overt (related to language standardization)
- Covert (related to solidarity)
- Why do vernaculars persist?
- Differing judgments about social significance of
language forms (r-lessness, pronunciations of
aunt) - Changes over time
11The role of grammar versus phonology
- Grammatical variables major symbolic role in
differentiating standard from vernacular dialects - Phonological variables more apt to show
regionally restricted social significance
12Roles of socially diagnostic features
- As social stereotypes (overt comments on use)
- As social markers (show social stratification
but not same level of conscious awareness shifts
across styles NCS) - As social indicators (correlate with social
stratification but not used in stylistic
variationexamples for American English??)
136.6 Social Class and Language Change
- Myth upper classes originate change and others
imitate - Reality lower-middle typically originate change
- Reality social classes between the extremes
bear responsibility for change most connected to
local community, but also sensitive to influences
from outside
14Change in relation to consciousness
- changes from below (the level of consciousness)
- changes from above (the level of
consciousness) example of consciously imitating
an external prestige norm--- - r-lessness from British prestige norm
15Resistance to Change
- the social differentiation of language in
American society is typified by the resistance to
proposed changes initiated by the lower classes
by a steadfast upper class rather than the
initiation of change by the upper classes and
subsequent emulation of these changes by the
lower classes (p. 190) - Example regularization of the grammar
166.7 Ethnicity
- Origins that precede or are external to the state
(Native American, immigrant groups) - Group membership that is involuntary
- Ancestral tradition rooted in a shared sense of
peoplehood - Distinctive value orientations and behavioral
patterns - Influence of the group on the lives of its
members - Group membership influenced by how members define
themselves and how they are defined by
othersimportance of the subjective dimension
17Ethnicity as expressed through language in
relation to other social factors
- African American Vernacular English can be part
of the expression of African American ethnicity - But it is also related to social status
- And is also associated with Southern regional
English - And can be used by non-African Americans in
certain situations (e.g. Hip Hop contexts)
18Sometimes ethnicity is conveyed mainly by a
distinctive variety of English
- Wolframs work in North Carolina has shown that a
Native American group that has lost its ancestral
language distinguishes itself from surrounding
groups through a distinctive variety of English - The situation in Wales
19Relationships between ethnicity and language
variation
- Transfer of grammatical patterns, phonological
patterns, lexicon from an ancestral language - The effects of more generalized strategies
related to the learning of English as a second
language - Maintenance of patterns of language use that are
distinctive
206.8 Latino English
- Latino English or Hispanic English (see link
for terms earlier on syllabus) - Historical
- Current
- New Mexico as officially bilingual
216.8.1 Chicano English
- Southwestern border states
- Myths (p. 197)
- Linguistic features
- Phonological
- Rhythm and intonation (prosody)
- Grammatical
- Lexical
226.8.2 The Range of Latino English
- Different geographical locations
- Influences from contacts with other dialects of
English - Urban and rural contexts
236.9 Cajun English
- From Acadians in contact with other French
speakers in Louisiana, Native Americans, slaves
from Africa and the Caribbean, Spanish-speaking
Islenos from the Canary Islands, and other
European immigrant groups a French Creole - English as symbol of Cajun identity (as heritage
language as receded) - Cajun Renaissance
246.10 Lumbee English
- The distinctive mix of dialect features in
Lumbee Vernacular English shows how a cultural
group can maintain a distinct ethnic identity by
configuring past and present dialect features in
a way which symbolically indicates---and helps
constitute---their cultural uniqueness even
though the ancestral language has been lost.