Firmly grounded in the methodologies of language socialization, conversation analysis, and Goffmans approach to human interaction, Language Socialization in Chinese Diasporas masterfully analyzes two parenting logics used to socialize American-born children of Chinese immigrants; one is based on "authoritarian" Confucian ideology, and another is rooted in "authoritative" ideology, promoting individualistic family dynamics. In families where Confucian ideals of filial piety, obedience, and shame-oriented humility prevail, children are socialized to high interpersonal accountability to parents, as well as courses of affectionate action in the family. Care and compassion are closely integrated with structures of control. Examining classical interactional topics, such as directives in social interactions, Chiu shows how the lived and embodied practices through which families negotiate intimate social relationships are built on distinctive ethical orders. The books findings about the affordances of an authoritarian Confucian parental logic counters ideas about parenting ideologies prevalent in the US. With acute attention to multimodality, facing formations, and trajectories of action, Language Socialization in Chinese Diasporas provides an exemplary model for how to conduct ethnographic research closely integrating linguistic anthropology and conversation analysis.
Marjorie Harness Goodwin
Distinguished Research Professor of Anthropology, UCLA
Hsin-fu Chiu offers a rare piece of work that grounds language socialization and acculturation in ethnographically informed, multimodality-based microanalyses of everyday life activities of heritage adolescent Mandarin Chinese speakers in Southern California. This ambitious yet thoroughly empirical monograph covers a wide range of topics: how parenting styles reflect power and epistemic asymmetries and how cultural notions such as filial piety, obedience, humbleness, shame, self-esteem, harmony, kin relations, etc. manifest and are reinforced in and through the mundane activities that take place in three ethnic Chinese immigrant households and in various public spheres.
Trained in conversation analysis and anthropological linguistics, Hsin-fu Chiu displays an array of skills in his painstaking analysis of the moment-by-moment unfolding of social interaction comprising multiple semiotic dimensions: lexico-grammar, prosody, visual and bodily behaviors, as well as materials in the interactional environment.
This innovative book should be of great value to anyone who is interested in Chinese discourse analysis, anthropological linguistics, comparative education, heritage language development, and ethnic studies of Asian/Chinse immigrants in the US.
Hongyin Tao
Professor of Chinese Language and Linguistics, University of California, Los Angeles