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Identity and Dialect Performance: A Study of Communities and Dialects [Kõva köide]

Edited by (American University in Cairo (AUC))
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Identity and Dialect Performance discusses the relationship between identity and dialects. It starts from the assumption that the use of dialect is not just a product of social and demographic factors, but can also be an intentional performance of identity. Dialect performance is related to identity construction and in a highly globalised world, the linguistic repertoire has increased rapidly, thereby changing our conventional assumptions about dialects and their usage.

The key outstanding feature of this particular book is that it spans an extensive range of communities and dialects; Italy, Hong Kong, Morocco, Egypt, Syria, Japan, Germany, The Sudan, The Netherlands, Nigeria, Spain, US, UK, French Guiana, Colombia,and Libya.

Arvustused

"This far-reaching book offers a range of global perspectives on dialect and identity. At the heart of Identity and Dialect Performance: A Study of Communities and Dialects is a contemporary understanding of dialect as an intentional performance of identity. This postmodern perspective throws many conventional assumptions and "truths" around dialect and identity into question and places the discussion of dialect at the intersections of class, race, ethnicity, geography, gender, and religious belief within a globalized, mediatized, and networked world. [ ] Overall, this excellent and fascinating book draws on a wide range of sources to give the reader a breadth of knowledge in relation to current social-linguistics and dialectology. [ ...] These contemporary studies have the potential to influence the approach to teaching dialect to actors in a way that suits the contemporary pluralist setting."

Daron Oram, Senior Lecturer in Voice at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, University of London, UK

"Identity and Dialect Performance affords an original vantage point from which the nuanced intersectionality and dynamism inherent in research on dialectology and sociolinguistics can be championed. The result is a compendium of studies on how dialect performance and linguistic choices are linked to identity construction through metalinguistic discourse in a comprehensive range of communities. This collection also celebrates methodological eclecticism through a wedding of qualitative and quantitative methods to yield maximum insights into manifestations of dialect performance and the process of identity construction."

- Samuel C. S. Tsang, Department of English, University of Oxford, UK

"An excellent book, it is indispensable for those researchers and students concerned with the role of dialect in the performance and negotiation of social meaning. Its publi-cation will surely prompt further equivalent research in other contexts."

- Robert M. McKenzie, Department of Humanities, Northumbria University, UK, Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development

List of figures
viii
List of tables
x
List of contributors
xi
Acknowledgements xvii
Introduction 1(14)
PART I Dialects in localised and delocalised contexts
15(54)
1 Nonstandard dialect and identity
17(18)
John Edwards
2 The elusive dialect border
35(14)
Dick Smakman
Marten van der Meulen
3 Dialect performances in superdiverse communities: The case for ethnographic approaches to language variation
49(20)
Anna De Fina
PART II Nation-states and identity construction in relation to a standard and a dialect
69(72)
4 The construction of linguistic borders and the rise of national identity in South Sudan: Some insights into Juba Arabic (Arabi Juba)
71(15)
Stefano Manfredi
5 From language to dialect and back: The case of Piedmontese
86(13)
Mauro Tosco
6 Darija and the construction of "Moroccanness"
99(26)
Dominique Caubet
7 "Sloppy speech is like sloppy dress": Folk attitudes towards nonstandard British English
125(16)
Carmen Ebner
PART III Contact, variation, performance and metalinguistic discourse
141(102)
8 From varieties in contact to the selection of linguistic resources in multilingual settings
143(17)
Isabelle Leglise
Santiago Sanchez Moreano
9 "You live in the United States, you speak English, "decian las maestras: How New Mexican Spanish speakers enact, ascribe, and reject ethnic identities
160(19)
Katherine O'Donnell Christoffersen
Naomi L. Shin
10 The social meanings ofWolof and French: Contact dialects, language ideology, and competing modernities in Senegal
179(13)
Fiona McLaughlin
11 The social value of linguistic practices in Tetouan and Ghomara (Northwestern Morocco)
192(18)
Angeles Vicente
Amina Naciri-Azzouz
12 New presentations of self in everyday life: Linguistic transgressions in England, Germany, and Japan
210(16)
Patrick Heinrich
13 Language and identity in Siwa Oasis: Indexing belonging, localness, and authenticity in a small minority community
226(17)
Valentina Serreli
PART IV The media, dialect performance, and language variation
243(114)
14 YouTube Yinzers: Stancetaking and the performance of `Pittsburghese'
245(20)
Scott F. Kiesling
15 Performing identity on screen: Language, identity, and humour in Scottish television comedy
265(21)
Natalie Braber
16 Identity, repertoire, and performance: The case of an Egyptian poet
286(17)
Reem Bassiouney
17 Ruination and amusement --- dialect, youth, and revolution in Naija
303(18)
Anne Storch
18 Dialectal variation and identity in post-revolutionary Libyan media: The case of Dragunov (2014)
321(19)
Luca D'Anna
19 The effect of TV and internal vs. external contact on variation in Syrian rural child language
340(17)
Rania Habib
Index 357
Reem Bassiouney is Professor of Linguistics at The American University of Cairo. Her recent book publications include Functions of Code-Switching in Egypt (2006), Arabic Sociolinguistics (2008), Arabic and the Media (2010, editor), Arabic language and Linguistics (2012, co-editor), Language and Identity in Modern Egypt (2014), and The Routledge Handbook of Arabic Linguistics (forthcoming, co-editor).