1 / 20

Language & Gender Post-midterm section

Language & Gender Post-midterm section. Questions? Tylers at stanford. Agenda. Midterm Questions/comments? Drag queens (Barrett 1999) Dude (Kiesling 2004). Barrett (1999). What’s the point? You can’t take things at face value (eg, drag queens don’t want to be white women).

jerzy
Download Presentation

Language & Gender Post-midterm section

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Language & GenderPost-midterm section Questions? Tylers at stanford

  2. Agenda • Midterm • Questions/comments? • Drag queens (Barrett 1999) • Dude (Kiesling 2004)

  3. Barrett (1999) • What’s the point? • You can’t take things at face value (eg, drag queens don’t want to be white women). • Identity isn’t simple. • Don’t try to shove people into one and only one box. • Think about “repertoires” of identity (Barrett uses “polyphonous”) • Performance! • We should look at how styles are juxtaposed

  4. Term potpourri • Cross-dresser • Drag king • Drag queen • Female impersonator • Glam queen • Transgendered • Transsexual • Transvestite

  5. Feminist scholars vs. queer theorists • Is drag inherently misogynistic? • A mockery, or at least a highly stereotyped image of femininity and womanhood • Used to reinforce a performer’s masculinity • Drag queens say it isn’t misogynistic—does that claim matter? • Is drag inherently transgressive? • E.g., a highly subversive act that deconstructs traditional assumptions concerning gender identity.

  6. Other words worth pursuing • “Messy” • Authenticness • Signifyin’ • White woman • Indexing

  7. Gender and ethnicity • These are big themes in life and in sociolinguistics • How does Barrett’s study connect the dots? • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f-XH8WcXHpk&feature=related (ffwd to 4:10) • Throw in sexuality: what’s the “bind” that gay Black men find themselves in?

  8. Some sounds of AAVE • Americans are really accurate at identifying race based on a speech sample (80-90%) • British are really good at social class, not race • A few characteristic features: • These > dese • Tooth > toot or toof • Simplification of consonant clusters (first > fus)

  9. Dude • How does Kiesling (2004) summarize the use of “dude”? • What can we take away from the article? • Learn about a word by observing and asking • But it isn’t just a word we’re learning about! • Interaction is crucial • Indexing! • Discourse!

  10. Other terms? • Man • Like • Rising intonation • What else?

  11. What can “dude” do for you? • Solidarity/camaraderie • But not gay • Nonchalant, not-too-enthusiastic “stance” • Is cool ever enthusiastic? • Effortless • Or lazy • What’s the connection to masculinity here? • Surfer/druggie/skater •  Nonconformity

  12. Dudettes

  13. Fonting of /u/ • Across North America • Index youth (older speakers don’t front)? • Social meaning of the fronting has a lot to do with dude?

  14. Spicoli, Mr. Hand, “linguistic icons” • http://www.netwalk.com/~truegger/ftrh/pizza.html • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i7RMiJUVDj8 • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f89WPMpniFl

  15. In interaction, what does he look at? • Where it occurs in a sentence (utterance initial or final position) • Who says it • Relationship to other words/variables (man, ing/in’) • What else?

  16. Kiesling’s 5 interactional functions • Let’s perform ‘em! • Marking discourse structure • Sharply falling intonation • Exclamation • Extremely elongated, falling in pitch (but not as sharply as (1) • Confrontational stance mitigation • Low pitch, rises slightly on a slightly elongated syllable • Marking affiliation and connection • Pitch is usually higher, often slightly rising • Signaling agreement • Very similar to (3) but with higher pitch

  17. Flexible to the point of meaninglessness? • Kiesling says, sure, I’ve posited a lot of different uses, but that’s okay. Indeterminancy is the name of the game (2004: 297). • “We should not confuse flexibility with meaninglessness”—indexing is a real thing, worth thinking about. • What do you think?

  18. Discourses! • “Cultural Discourses are similar to ideologies, yet leave open the possibility of contradiction, challenge, and change, and describe more than idea systems, including social practices and structures…I will always use a capital D with cultural Discourses to distinguish them from the linguistic notion of discourse, which is talk-in-interaction.” (Kiesling 2004: 302)

  19. One last point • “The very definition of prestige changes over time” (Kiesling 2004: 300).

  20. Drag queens & dudes • What do these articles share in common? • How are they different? • How does the use of ‘dude’ support heteronormativity? How’s it related to homophobia?

More Related