Patterns of linguistic variation among Glaswegian adolescent males
Identifieur interne : 000338 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 000337; suivant : 000339Patterns of linguistic variation among Glaswegian adolescent males
Auteurs : Robert Lawson [Royaume-Uni]Source :
- Journal of Sociolinguistics [ 1360-6441 ] ; 2011-04.
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
- Teeft :
- Acoustic, Acoustic analysis, Adolescent males, Alternative cofp, Anova tests, Banister, Banister academy, Blackwell, Blackwell publishing, Cambridge university press, Clothing choices, Cofp, Cofp framework, Cofp membership, Cofps, Eckert, Edinburgh, Edinburgh university press, Ethnographic, Ethnographic fieldwork, Ethnography, Etienne wenger, Glasgow, Glaswegian, Glaswegian adolescents, Glaswegian vernacular, High school, Josh, Language attitudes, Language variation, Lawson, Lawson figure, Lexical sets, Linguistic practice, Linguistic variation, Macafee, Neds, Neil, Noah, Normalised, Other cofps, Phonetic, Phonetic environment, Phonetic sciences, Realisation, Regression analysis, Schoolie, Schoolie cofp, Schoolie cofp members, Schoolie cofps, Scottish english, Significant difference, Social class, Social identity, Social meaning, Social practice, Social practices, Sociolinguistic, Sociolinguistic variation, Sociolinguistics, Sociophonetic investigation, Sports cofp, Sports cofps, Teenage males, Unpublished dissertation, Youth crime.
Abstract
This article presents the results of an ethnographically informed sociolinguistic investigation of Glaswegian Vernacular and examines the intersection between language and identity using data collected from a group of working‐class adolescent males, over the course of three years, from a high school in the south side of Glasgow, Scotland, called Banister Academy. Through the fine‐grained acoustic analysis of the phonetic variable cat (equivalent to the trap/bath/palm set, Johnston 1997), coupled with ethnographic observations, this article shows how patterns of variation are related to Community of Practice membership, how the members of the Communities of Practice in Banister Academy use linguistic and social resources to differentiate themselves from one another, and how certain patterns of variation acquire social meaning within the peer‐group. This article contributes to the under‐researched area of adolescent male language use and offers one of the first ethnographically supported accounts of linguistic variation in Glasgow.
Url:
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9841.2011.00477.x
Affiliations:
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Le document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">This article presents the results of an ethnographically informed sociolinguistic investigation of Glaswegian Vernacular and examines the intersection between language and identity using data collected from a group of working‐class adolescent males, over the course of three years, from a high school in the south side of Glasgow, Scotland, called Banister Academy. Through the fine‐grained acoustic analysis of the phonetic variable cat (equivalent to the trap/bath/palm set, Johnston 1997), coupled with ethnographic observations, this article shows how patterns of variation are related to Community of Practice membership, how the members of the Communities of Practice in Banister Academy use linguistic and social resources to differentiate themselves from one another, and how certain patterns of variation acquire social meaning within the peer‐group. This article contributes to the under‐researched area of adolescent male language use and offers one of the first ethnographically supported accounts of linguistic variation in Glasgow.</div>
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