1st Edition

On Language and Sexual Politics

By Deborah Cameron Copyright 2006
206 Pages
by Routledge

206 Pages
by Routledge

206 Pages
by Routledge

This collection of articles presents a selection of Deborah Cameron’s work on language, gender and sex in one single volume. Arranged thematically, this book covers major developments in Anglo-American feminist linguistics, and Cameron’s responses to these, spanning the last twenty years. The collection’s overarching theme is the political relationship between language and gender: four... Read more

Acknowledgements  Introduction: On language and sexual politics  Part 1: The Sexual Politics of Representation  1. Sexism and Semantics (1984)  2. Nonsexist Language: Lost in Translation? (1995)  3. Language, Sexism and Advertising Standards (2004)  Part 2: Power and Difference  4. Lakoff in Context: The Form and Function of Tag Wuestions (with Fiona McAlinden and Kathy O’Leary, 1988)  5. Performing Gender Identity: Young Men’s Talk and the Construction of Heterosexual Masculinity (1997)  6. ‘Is there any ketchup, Vera?’ Gender, Power and Pragmatics (1998 ) Part 3: Ideologies of Language and Gender  7. Verbal Hygiene for Women: Linguistics Misapplied? (1994)  8. Styling the Worker: Gender and the Commodification of Language in the Globalized Service Economy (2000)  9. Men are from Earth, Women are from Earth (2003)  Part 4: Language, Gender and Sexuality  10. Naming of Parts: Gender, Culture and Terms for the Penis among American College Students (1992)  11. Straight Talking: The Sociolinguistics of Heterosexuality (2002)  Notes  Bibliography  Index

Biography

Deborah Cameron currently holds the Rupert Murdoch Chair of Language and Communication at Oxford University. A sociolinguist and feminist, she is the author of Verbal Hygiene (1995) and The Feminist Critique of Language (1998), and co-author with Don Kulick of Language and Sexuality (2003).

'I am daunted to be writing a review of a book that says everything so well... The entire book would be an excellent resource for a language and gender, sociolinguistics, or gender studies course... All of this in Cameron's desert-sky clear prose, coupled with her forceful argumentation, will engage students into the field in a way that a that a textbook would not.' - Scott F.Kiesling, University of Pittsburgh, USA