Category: 6. Language
SCHI005. Schilling-Estes,
Natalie. Constructing ethnicity in interaction. Journal
of sociolinguistics 8.2 (May 2004): 163-195. 6 tables, 22 extracts.
Publication type: Journal article
Electronic access: Full text available
through Ingenta.
In this study, Schilling-Estes works
to further the application of social constructionist methods to sociolinguistics.
She also uses quantitative methods and, through the vehicle of the
sociolinguistic interview, studies localized speech practices. Her
study examines ways in which both the interviewer and the interviewee
use language to fashion ethnic identity as well as other aspects of
identity.
Following concise overviews of the Robeson
County context and Lumbee dialect, Schilling-Estes describes the sociolinguistic
interview analyzed for this article. A Lumbee undergraduate student
was interviewed for one hour and fifteen minutes by an African American
graduate student. The two students were friends living in the same
dormitory. The interviewer had spent a good deal of time in Robeson
County. The interview was much more like a casual conversation than
a formal interview. Conversational topics included two separate sections
on race relations (in Robeson County currently, in Robeson County
during the Civil War, in the South, and in current politics) and a
section on family and friends.
Schilling-Estes examined the speech
of the interviewer and interviewee for occurrences of six phonological
and morphosyntactic features that are associated with ethnic or regional
groups: postvocalic r-lessness; monophthongal /ay/; third-person
singular -s absence; copula deletion; habitual be, and
nonstandard regularization patterns for past tense be.
Generally, the interviewer and interviewee
showed the usage patterns that would be expected for African Americans
and Lumbees with regard to the features studied. Significant variations
in the usage levels of certain features were noticed in the two sections
in which race relations were discussedwhen compared to each
other and when compared to the section on friends and family. Schilling-Estes
surmises that when race is being discussed, each speaker uses features
that highlight ethnic distance from the listener; but when family
and friends are being discussed, the speaker linguistically downplays
his ethnic identity. She provides detailed analyses of these differences,
illustrating them with twenty-two excerpts from the interview. She
also uses two excerpts to show the interviewees use of r-lessness
in a performative manner when he is quoting historical personages.
She discusses, too, some ways in which the interviewer is able to
shape the data gathered in the interview.
Additional Subjects: Sociolinguistics
| Race relations | R-lessness | Ethnic identity | Past be
regularization | Monophthongal /ay/ |Third-person singular -s
absence | Copular deletion
This annotation was written on
June 20, 2004
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