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Journal of Sociolinguistics

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
Journal of Sociolinguistics promotes sociolinguistics as a thoroughly linguistic and thoroughly social-scientific endeavour. The journal is concerned with language in all its dimensions, macro and micro, as formal features or abstract discourses, as situated talk or written text. Data in published articles represent a wide range of languages, regions and situations - from Alune to Xhosa, from Cameroun to Canada, from bulletin boards to dating ads.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

sociolinguistics; journal; linguistics; language; society; identity; theoretical; empirical; discour

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde ene. 1997 / hasta dic. 2023 Wiley Online Library

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

1360-6441

ISSN electrónico

1467-9841

Editor responsable

John Wiley & Sons, Inc. (WILEY)

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Tabla de contenidos

The globalization of local indexicalities through music: African‐American English and the blues

Romeo De Timmerman; Ludovic De Cuypere; Stef Slembrouck

Palabras clave: History and Philosophy of Science; Linguistics and Language; Philosophy; Sociology and Political Science; Language and Linguistics.

Pp. No disponible

A materialist take on minoritization, emancipation, and language revitalization: Occitan sociolinguistics since the 1970s

James Costa

Palabras clave: History and Philosophy of Science; Linguistics and Language; Philosophy; Sociology and Political Science; Language and Linguistics.

Pp. No disponible

“OK guys, thank you for coming today”: Indexicality, utterance events, and verbal rituals in political speeches in Sheikh Jarrah

Chaim NoyORCID

Palabras clave: History and Philosophy of Science; Linguistics and Language; Philosophy; Sociology and Political Science; Language and Linguistics.

Pp. No disponible

The vowel space as sociolinguistic sign

Teresa Pratt

Palabras clave: History and Philosophy of Science; Linguistics and Language; Philosophy; Sociology and Political Science; Language and Linguistics.

Pp. No disponible

Lengua y utopía: El movimiento esperantista en España, 1890–1936.RobertoGarvía. Granada: Editorial Universidad de Granada. 2022. 301 pp. 24 B/W illustrations. Paperback (9788433869364) 24 EUR, Ebook (9788433869371) 9.60 EUR

Mariana di Stefano

Palabras clave: History and Philosophy of Science; Linguistics and Language; Philosophy; Sociology and Political Science; Language and Linguistics.

Pp. No disponible

Development NGOs and Languages: Listening, Power and InclusionHilaryFootitt, Angela M.Crack, and WineTesseur. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020. 248 pp. 1 B/W illustration. Hardback (9783030517755) 49.99 EUR, Paperback (9783030517786) 49.99 EUR,

Felix BandaORCID

Palabras clave: History and Philosophy of Science; Linguistics and Language; Philosophy; Sociology and Political Science; Language and Linguistics.

Pp. No disponible

Syllable‐final /s/ as an index of language, gender, and ethnicity in a contact variety of Mexican Spanish

Craig WelkerORCID

Palabras clave: History and Philosophy of Science; Linguistics and Language; Philosophy; Sociology and Political Science; Language and Linguistics.

Pp. No disponible

The discursive construction of language ownership and responsibility for Indigenous language revitalisation

Chien Ju TingORCID

Palabras clave: History and Philosophy of Science; Linguistics and Language; Philosophy; Sociology and Political Science; Language and Linguistics.

Pp. No disponible

Whose English gets paid off?—Neoliberal discourses of English and ethnic minority students’ subjectivities in China

Xiaoyan (Grace) Guo; Michelle Mingyue Gu

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>The study traces the trajectories of Uyghur college students’ subjectivity construction and transformation from Foucault's governmentality perspective. Drawing on ethnographic data of two telling cases, it explores how minoritized students’ subjectivities were linked to neoliberal discourses of English and constituted by power techniques, self‐technologies, and affective dispositions embedded in wider institutional transformations. Participants were found experiencing a shift to the individualistic subjectivity associated with academic achievement and performance in English away from the collective identity of “authentic Uyghur” symbolized by the Uyghur language. Two salient discourses of English, i.e., English as constraints, and English as academic excellence, emerging from the neoliberal‐oriented institutional English language education policies and practices, shaped the participants either as incompetent English learners or elite subjects. Participants learned to responsibilitize themselves through such self‐technologies as confession and preaching, and affective practices. Yet, technologies of hope and optimism became for a few the enjoyment of experiences and performance of elitism while projecting a majority disadvantaged as affectively problematic others. The self‐technologies and affective responses without recognition of larger structures of inequality could further reinforce the neoliberal logic. The affective labor of sense of solidarity, commitment to community, empathy for the deprived ones with critical reflection and collective action, nevertheless, may counter neoliberal logic and point to an alternative path to meaning‐making and social relations.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: History and Philosophy of Science; Linguistics and Language; Philosophy; Sociology and Political Science; Language and Linguistics.

Pp. No disponible

We /r/ Tongan, not American: Variation and the social meaning of rhoticity in Tongan English

Danielle TodORCID

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>The current paper argues that speakers of Tongan English, an emergent variety spoken in the Kingdom of Tonga, may use rhoticity to construct a cosmopolitan and globally oriented local social identity. A variationist analysis of non‐prevocalic /r/ in a corpus of 56 speakers reveals a change in progress towards rhoticity led by young females, whereas an affiliation with Liahona High School, a Mormon secondary school, predicts advanced adoption of the feature. I argue that rhoticity carries a positive ideological load for younger speakers as an index of globalness, modernity and Western cultural values, whereas for Liahona‐affiliated speakers, an additional indexicality of rhoticity is Mormonism. Linguistic constraints on variation mirror patterns found in previous studies on L1/L2 varieties and are thus more universal, whereas social constraints on variation are best examined through a local lens.</jats:p>

Pp. No disponible