Bültmann & Gerriets
Identity and Dialect Performance
A Study of Communities and Dialects
von Reem Bassiouney
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
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Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM


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ISBN: 978-1-315-27971-8
Erschienen am 24.10.2017
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 388 Seiten

Preis: 51,49 €

Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

This book discusses the relation between identity and dialects.



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).



Contents



List of Figures

List of Tables

List of Contributors

Introduction


I. Dialects in Localised Delocalised Contexts


1. Nonstandard dialect and identity


John Edwards (St. Francis Xavier University)

2. The elusive dialect border


Dick Smakman & Marten van der Meulen (Universiteit Leiden)

3. Dialect performances in super diverse communities: the case for ethnographic approaches to language variation


Anna De Fina (Georgetown University)




II. Nation-States and Identity Construction in Relation to a Standard and a Dialect


4. The construction of linguistic borders and the rise of national identity in South Sudan: some insights into Juba Arabic (árabi júba)


Stefano Manfredi (Centre national de la recherche scientifique, SeDyL-CELIA)

5. From language to dialect and back: the case of Piedmontese


Mauro Tosco (Università degli Studi di Torino)

6. Darija and the construction of "Moroccanness"


Dominique Caubet (INALCO, Paris, and Centre Jacques Berque, CNRS - MAE, Rabat)

7. 'Sloppy speech is like sloppy dress': folk attitudes towards non-standard British English


Carmen Ebner (Universiteit Leiden)



III. Contact, Variation, Performance and Metalinguistic Discourse


8. From varieties in contact to the selection of linguistic features in multilingual settings


Isabelle Leglise & Santiago Sanchez Moreano (Centre national de la recherche scientifique, SeDyL-CELIA)

9. 'You live in the United States, you speak English', decían las maestras: how New Mexican Spanish speakers enact, ascribe and reject ethnic identities


Katherine O'Donnell Christoffersen & Naomi Shin (University of New Mexico)

10. The social meanings of Wolof and French: contact dialects, language ideology, and competing modernities in Senegal


Fiona Mc Laughlin


11. The social value of variation in Tétouan and Ghomara (Northwestern Morocco)


Angeles Vicente & Amina Naciri-Azzouz (Universidad de Zaragoza)

12. New presentations of self in everyday life: Linguistic transgressions in England, Germany and Japan


Patrick Heinrich (Università Ca' Foscari)

13. Language and identity in Siwa Oasis: Indexing belonging, localness and authenticity in a small minority community

Valentina Serreli



IV. The Media, Dialect Performance and Language Variation


14. Youtube Yinzers: Stancetaking and the performance of Pittsburghese


Scott F. Kielsing (University of Pittsburgh)

15. Performing Scottish identity on Screen: Language, Identity, and Humour in Scottish Television Comedy

Natalie Braber (Nottingham Trent University)

16. Identity, Repertoire, and Performance: The Case of an Egyptian Poet


Reem Bassiouney (The American University in Cairo)

17. Ruination and amusement - dialect, youth and revolution in Naija


Anne Storch (Universität zu Köln)



18. Dialectal variation and identity in post-revolutionary Libyan media: The case of Dragunov (2014)


Luca D'Anna (University of Mississippi)

19. The effect of TV and internal versus external contact on variation in Syrian rural child language


Rania Habib (Syracuse University)

Index


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