|
LSA 348 | Social Theory and Variation | Course Requirements | Bibliography | HOME | Slides |
|
Brown, P. and S. Levinson (1979). Social structure, groups and
interaction. Social Markers in Speech. K. R. Scherer and
H. Giles. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press: 291-342.
Bucholtz, Mary. 1996. Geek the girl: Language, femininity and female nerds. Gender and belief systems, ed. by N. Warner et al., 119-31. Berkeley: Berkeley Women and Language Group. Campbell-Kibler, K. (2007). "Accent, (ING), and the social logic of listener perceptions." American speech. 82(1): 32-64. Eckert, P. (2000). Linguistic variation as social practice. Oxford, Blackwell. Gal, Susan and Judith T. Irvine 1995 The boundaries of languages and disciplines: how ideologies construct difference. Social Research 62(4):967-994. Gupta, Akhil and James Ferguson. 1997. Culture, power, place: ethnography at the end of an era. In Culture, Power, Place: Explorations in Critical Anthropology. Akhil Gupta and James Ferguson, eds. Duke University Press. Hanks, William F. 2005. Pierre Bourdieu and the practices of language. Annual review of anthropology, 34.67-83. Inoue, Miyako. 2004. What does language remember?: Indexical inversion and the naturalized history of Japanese women. Journal of linguistic anthropology, 14.39-56. Inoue, Miyako. (2006). Vicarious language: Gender and linguistic modernity in Japan. Berkeley: University of California Press. Irvine, Judith T. and Susan Gal (2000) Language Ideology and Linguistic Differentiation. In. Paul V. Kroskrity, ed. Regimes of Language. Pp. 35-83. Santa Fe: School of American. Research Press. Johnstone, Barbara. (2004). Place, globalization, and linguistic variation. Sociolinguistic variation: Critical reflections, ed. by Carmen Fought, 65-83. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press. Johnstone, B., J. Andrus and A. Danielson. (2006). Mobility, indexicality, and the enregisterment of "Pittsburghese." Journal of English Linguuistics 34: 77-104. Koven, Michele. unpublished ms. Sounding old and being young: Language, age, and the Performance of "real" identities among Luso-descendans in France and Portugal. (The contents of this manuscript will appear as Chapter 3 of Koven (in press.) Koven, Michele. in press. Selves in two languages: Bilinguals' verbal enactments of identity in French and Portugueses. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. McConnell-Ginet, S. (1984). The origins of sexist language in discourse. Discourses in Reading and Linguistics. S. J. White and V. Teller, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 433: 123-35. Mendoza-Denton, N. (in press). Homegirls: Language and cultural practice among Latina youth gangs. Cambridge: Blackwell. Mertz, Elizabeth and Parmentier, Richard eds. (1985). Semiotic Mediation: Sociocultural and Psychological Perspectives. New York: Academic Press Pratt, M. L. (1987). Linguistic utopias. the linguistics of writing: Arguments between language and literature. N. Fabb, D. Attridge, bA. Durant and C. MacCabe. New York, Methuen: 48-66. Ochs, E. (1991). "Indexing gender". Rethinking Context, ed. by A. Duranti and C. Goodwin. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Peirce, Charles S. (1931-36). The Collected Papers. Volumes 1-6. Eds. Charles Hartshorne and Paul Weiss. Cambridge M.A.: Harvard University Press. Pierce, Charles S. (1958). The Collected Papers. Volumes 7 & 8. Ed. Arthur Burks. Cambridge M.A.: Harvard University Press. Schilling-Estes, N. (1998). "Invesetigating "self-conscious" speech: The performance register in Ocracoke English." Language in society 27: 53-83. Silverstein, M. (1976). Shifters, linguistic categories, and cultural description. Meaning in anthropology. K. H. Basso and H. A. Selby. Albuquerque, University of New Mexico Press: 11-55. Silverstein, Michael. (1998). Contemporary Transformations of Local Linguistic Communities. Annual Review of Anthropology, 27:401-26. Silverstein, M. (2003). "Indexical Order and the Dialectics of Sociolinguistic Life." Language and communication 23(3-4): 193-229. Silverstein, Michael. (2004). 'Cultural' concepts and the language-culture nexus. Current Anthropology 45.5. 621-52. Smitherman, G. (1995). African American women speak out on Anita Hill-Clarence Thomas. Detroit, Wayne State University Press. Talbot, Mary. 1992. A synthetic sisterhood: False friends in a teenage magazine. Locating Power: Proceedings of the Second Berkeley Women and Language Conference, ed. by Kira Hall, Mary Bucholtz and Birch Moonwomon, 573-80. Berkeley: Berkeley Women and Language Group. Wong, A. (2005). "The re-appropriation of Tongzhi." Language in society 34(5): 763-93. Wong, A. and Q. Zhang (2000). "The linguistic construction of the tongzhi community." Journal of linguistic anthropology 10(2): 248-276. Zhang, Qing. 2005. A Chinese yuppie in Beijing: Phonological variation and the construction of a new professional identity. Language in society, 34.431-66. |