: Peter Auer
: Style and Social Identities Alternative Approaches to Linguistic Heterogeneity
: De Gruyter Mouton
: 9783110198508
: Language, Power and Social Process [LPSP]ISSN
: 1
: CHF 126.50
:
: Allgemeine und Vergleichende Sprachwissenschaft
: English
: 524
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

Why do languages allow us to say 'the same thing' in so many different ways? One of the answers is that in saying what we want to say, we always position ourselves in social space as well, by speaking differently from relevant other social actors or groups. This volume explores how variability in language is exploited (and maintained) in order to perform this social identity work in interaction. It shows that variable features cluster together in socially meaningful ways when considered as social (communicative) styles linked to social identities.

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Peter Auer, Albert-Ludwigs-Universitä t Freiburg, Germany.

Preface5
Chapter 1. Introduction9
Part 1. Bilingual styles and social identities31
Introduction to Part 133
Chapter 2. Language alternation as a resource for identity negotiations among Dominican American bilinguals37
Chapter 3. Style and stylization in the construction of identities in a card-playing club65
Chapter 4. Being a ‘colono’ and being ‘daitsch’ in Rio Grande do Sul: Language choice and linguistic heterogeneity as a resource for social categorisation93
Chapter 5. Names and identities, or: How to be a hip young Italian migrant in Germany129
Chapter 6. Socio-cultural identity, communicative style, and their change over time: A case study of a group of German-Turkish girls in Mannheim/Germany163
Chapter 7. Bystanders and the linguistic construction of identity in face-to-back communication195
Part 2. Monolingual styles and social identities - From local to global215
Introduction to Part 2217
Chapter 8. Aneurin Bevan, class wars and the styling of political antagonism221
Chapter 9. Identity and positioning in interactive knowledge displays255
Chapter 10. Style online: Doing hip-hop on the German-speaking Web287
Part 3. Identity-work through styling and stylization327
Introduction to Part 3329
Chapter 11. Playing with the voice of the other: Stylized Kanaksprak in conversations among German adolescents333
Chapter 12. Identity and language construction in an online community: The case of ‘Ali G’369
Chapter 13. Positioning in style: Men in women’s jointly produced stories401
Chapter 14. The construction of otherness in reported dialogues as a resource for identity work427
Chapter 15. The humorous stylization of ‘new’ women and men and conservative others453
Chapter 16. A postscript: Style and identity in interactional sociolinguistics485
Index511