Anthropological Linguistics: Critical Concepts in Language Studies
Bambi B. Schieffelin and Paul B. Garrett (editors)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Volume 1: THINKING ABOUT LANGUAGE – part 1
0. Paul B. Garrett and Bambi B. Schieffelin
Anthropological Linguistics/Linguistic Anthropology: An Introduction
1. Franz Boas
Introduction.
In Handbook of American Indian Languages, Part I. (1911) Selections from pp. 1-83. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 40, courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.
2. Charles L. Briggs
Learning How to Ask: Native Metacommunicative Competence and the Incompetence of Fieldworkers.
Language in Society 13(1):1-28. (1984)
3. Charles L. Briggs & Richard Bauman
Genre, Intertextuality, and Social Power.
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 2(2):131-172. (1992)
4. Harold Conklin 1955
Hanunóo Color Categories.
Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 11(4): 339-344. (1955)
5. John W. Du Bois
Meaning without Intention: Lessons from Divination.
In Jane H. Hill & Judith T. Irvine (eds.), Responsibility and Evidence in Oral Discourse, pp. 48-71. (1992) Cambridge University Press
6. Alessandro Duranti
Language as Culture in U.S. Anthropology: Three Paradigms.
Current Anthropology 44(3):323-347. (2003)
7. Penelope Eckert
Diglossia: Separate and Unequal
Linguistics 18:1053-1064. (1980)
8. Charles Ferguson
Diglossia.
Word 15:325-340. (1959)
9. Susan Gal
Between Speech and Silence: The Problematics of Research on Language and Gender.
In Micaela di Leonardo (ed.), Gender at the Crossroads of Knowledge: Feminist Anthropology in the Postmodern Era, pp. 175-203. (1991) Berkeley: University of California Press.
10. John J. Gumperz
Interethnic Communication.
In John J. Gumperz, Discourse Strategies, pp. 172-186. (1982) New York: Cambridge University Press
11. William F. Hanks
Discourse Genres in a Theory of Practice.
American Ethnologist 14(4):668-692. (1987)
12. Monica Heller
Bilingualism.
In Christine Jourdan & Kevin Tuite (eds.), Language, Culture, and Society, pp. 156-167. (2006) New York: Cambridge University Press
13. Dell Hymes
The Ethnography of Speaking.
In T. Gladwin and W. Sturtevant (eds.), Anthropology and Human Behavior, pp. 13-53. (1962) Anthropological Society of Washington.
Volume 2: THINKING ABOUT LANGUAGE – part 2
14. Judith T. Irvine
When Talk isn’t Cheap: Language and Political Economy.
American Ethnologist 16(2):248-267. (1989)
15. Judith T. Irvine & Susan Gal.
Language Ideology and Linguistic Differentiation.
In Paul V. Kroskrity (ed.), Regimes of Language: Ideologies, Polities, and Identities, pp. 35-84. (2000) Santa Fe: School of American Research.
16. Roman Jakobson
Closing Statement: Linguistics and Poetics.
In Thomas A. Sebeok (ed.), Style in Language, excerpt from pages 350-377. (1960) Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
17. Michelle Z. Rosaldo
The Things We Do with Words: Ilongot Speech Acts and Speech Act Theory in Philosophy.
Language in Society 11(2):203-237. (1982)
18. Edward Sapir
The Unconscious Patterning of Behavior in Society.
In E. S. Dummer (ed.), The Unconscious: A Symposium, (1927). New York: Alfred A. Knopf
19. Benjamin L. Whorf
The Relation of Habitual Thought and Behavior to Language.
In J. Carroll (ed.), Language, Thought, and Reality: Selected Writings of Benjamin Lee Whorf, pp. 134-159. (1956) Cambridge, MA: MIT Press
20. Raymond Williams
Language.
In Raymond T. Williams, Marxism and Literature, pp. 21-44, (1977) Oxford: Oxford University Press.
21. Kathryn A. Woolard
Simultaneity and Bivalency as Strategies in Bilingualism.
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 8(1):3-29. (1998)
22. Kathryn A. Woolard
Language Ideology as a Field of Inquiry.
In Bambi B. Schieffelin, Kathryn A. Woolard, & Paul V. Kroskrity (eds.), Language Ideologies: Practice and Theory, pp. 3-47, (1998) Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Volume 3: TALKING ABOUT LANGUAGE
23. Keith Basso
Joking Imitations of Anglo-Americans: Interpretive Functions.
In Keith Basso, Portraits of "The Whiteman": Linguistic Play and Cultural Symbols among the Western Apache, pp. 37-64. (1979) New York: Cambridge University Press.
24. Richard Bauman
Let your words be few: Speaking and Silence in Quaker Ideology.
In Richard Bauman, Let Your Words Be Few: Symbolism of Speaking and Silence Among Seventeenth-Century Quakers, pp. 20-31. (1983) Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
25. Richard Bauman
‘Any man who keeps more’n one hound’ll lie to you’: A Contextual Study of Expressive Lying.
In Richard Bauman, Story, Performance, and Event: Contextual Studies of Oral Narrative, pp. 11-32. (1986) New York: Cambridge University Press.
26. Penelope Brown
Everyone Has to Lie in Tzeltal.
In Shoshana Blum-Kulka & Catherine E. Snow (eds.), Talking to Adults: The Contribution of Multiparty Discourse to Language Acquisition, pp. 241-275. (2002), Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
27. Jillian Cavanaugh
Accent Matters: Material Consequences of Sounding Local in Northern Italy.
Language & Communication 25(2):127-148. (2005).
28. Nancy Dorian
Defining the Speech Community to Include its Working Margins.
In Suzanne Romaine (ed.), Sociolinguistic Variation in Speech Communities, pp. 25-33. (1982). Edward Arnold
29. Ayala Fader
Reclaiming Sacred Sparks: Linguistic Syncretism and Gendered Language Shift among Hasidic Jews in New York.
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 17(1):1-22. (2007).
30. Steven Feld
Wept Thoughts: The Voicing of Kaluli Memories.
Oral Tradition 5(2-3):241-266. (1990).
31. John Haviland
Ideologies of Language: Some Reflections on Language and U.S. Law.
American Anthropologist 105(4):764-774. (2003).
32. Jane H. Hill
Expert Rhetorics in Advocacy for Endangered Languages: Who is Listening, and What do They Hear?
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 12(2):119-133. (2002).
33. Miyako Inoue
What Does Language Remember?: Indexical Inversion and the Naturalized History of Japanese Women.
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 14(1):39-56. (2004).
34. Jean Jackson
Language Identity of the Colombian Vaupés Indians.
In Richard Bauman & Joel Sherzer (eds.), Explorations in the Ethnography of Speaking, 2nd ed., pp. 50-64. (1989) New York: Cambridge University Press.
35. Rosina Lippi-Green
Accent, Standard Language Ideology, and the Discriminatory Pretext in the Courts.
Language in Society 23:163-198. (1994).
36. Laura Miller
Those Naughty Teenage Girls: Japanese Kogals, Slang, and Media Assessments.
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 14(2):225-247. (2004).
37. Claudia Mitchell-Kernan
Signifying and Marking: Two Afro-American Speech Acts.
In John J. Gumperz and Dell Hymes (eds.), Directions in Sociolinguistics: The Ethnography of Communication, pp. 161-179, (1972) New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston.
38. Robert E. Moore
Disappearing, Inc.: Glimpsing the Sublime in the Politics of Access to Endangered Languages.
Language & Communication 26(3-4):296-315. (2006).
39. Marcyliena Morgan
Theories and Politics in African American English
Annual Review of Anthropology 23:325-345. (1994).
40. Bambi B. Schieffelin & Rachelle C. Doucet
The ‘Real’ Haitian Creole: Ideology, Metalinguistics, and Orthographic Choice.
American Ethnologist 21(1):176-200. (1994).
41. Michael Silverstein
Monoglot ‘Standard’ in America: Standardization and Metaphors of Linguistic Hegemony. (1996)
Volume 4: USING LANGUAGE
42. Laura M. Ahearn
‘Writing Desire in Nepali Love Letters
Language & Communication 23(2):107-122. (2003).
43. Benjamin Bailey
Communication of Respect in Interethnic Service Encounters.
Language in Society 26(3): 327-256. (1997).
44. Patricia Baquedano-López
Creating Social Identities through Doctrina Narratives.
Issues in Applied Linguistics 8(1): 27-45. (1997).
45. Keith Basso
To Give Up on Words: Silence in Western Apache Culture.
Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 26(3): 213-230. (1970). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
46. Deborah Cameron
Performing Gender Identity: Young Men’s Talk and the Construction of Heterosexual Masculinity.
In S. Johnson and U. Meinhof (eds.), Language and Masculinity, pp. 47-64. (1997). Blackwell Publishers Ltd.
47. Alessandro Duranti
Language in Context and Language as Context: Samoan Respect Vocabulary.
In A. Duranti & C. Goodwin (eds.), Rethinking Context: Language as an Interactive Phenomenon, pp. 77-99. (1992) New York: Cambridge University Press.
48. Penelope Eckert & Sally McConnell-Ginet
Constructing Meaning, Constructing Selves: Snapshots of Language, Gender, and Class from Belten High.
In K. Hall & M. Bucholtz (eds.), Gender Articulated, pp. 469-507. (1995) New York: Routledge.
49. Patrick Eisenlohr
Temporalities of Community: Ancestral Language, Pilgrimage, and Diasporic Belonging in Mauritius
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 14(1):81-98. (2004).
50. Charles Goodwin
A Competent Speaker Who Can’t Speak: The Social Life of Aphasia.
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 14(2):151-170. (2004).
51. Kira Hall
Intertextual Sexuality: Parodies of Class, Identity, and Desire in Liminal Delhi.
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 15(1):125–144. (2005).
52. Shirley Brice Heath,
What No Bedtime Story Means: Narrative Skills at Home and School
Language in Society 11(1): 49-76. (1982).
53. Jane H. Hill
Language, Race, and White Public Space.
American Anthropologist 100(3): 680-689. (1999).
54. Judith T. Irvine
Strategies of Status Manipulation in the Wolof Greeting.
In Richard Bauman & Joel Sherzer (eds.), Explorations in the Ethnography of Speaking, 2nd ed., pp. 167-191. (1989). New York: Cambridge University Press.
55. Norma Mendoza-Denton
‘Muy Macha’: Gender and Ideology in Gang-Girls’ Discourse about Makeup.
Ethnos 61 (1-2): 47-63. (1996).
56. Elinor Ochs
Indexing Gender.
In Alessandro Duranti & Charles Goodwin (eds.), Rethinking Context: Language as an Interactive Phenomenon, pp. 336-358. (1992) New York: Cambridge University Press.
57. Elinor Ochs & Bambi B. Schieffelin
Language Acquisition and Socialization: Three Developmental Stories and Their Implications.
In R. Shweder & R. A. LeVine (eds.), Culture Theory: Essays on Mind, Self, and Emotion, pp. 276-320. (1985). New York: Cambridge University Press.
58. Amy L. Paugh
Multilingual Play: Children’s Code-switching, Role Play, and Agency in Dominica, West Indies.
Language in Society 34(1):63-86. (2005).
59. Sabina Perrino
Intimate Hierarchies and Qur'anic Saliva (Tëfli): Textuality in a Senegalese Ethnomedical Encounter.
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 12(2):225-259. (2002).
60. Bonnie Urciuoli
The Political Topography of Spanish and English: The View from a New York Puerto Rican Neighborhood.
American Ethnologist 18(2):295-310. (1991).
Volume 5: CHANGING LANGUAGE
61. Susan Gal
Codeswitching and Consciousness in the European Periphery.
American Ethnologist 14(4):637-653. (1987).
62. Paul B. Garrett
‘Say it like you see it’: Radio Broadcasting and the Mass Mediation of Creole Nationhood in St. Lucia.
Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 14(1-2):135-160. (2007)
63. Katherine E. Hoffman
Berber Language Ideologies, Maintenance, and Contraction: Gendered Variation in the Indigenous Margins of Morocco.
Language & Communication 26(2):144-167. (2006).
64. Graham M. Jones & Bambi B. Schieffelin
Enquoting Voices, Accomplishing Talk: Uses of be + like in Instant Messaging.
Language & Communication 29(1):77-113. (2009).
65. Elizabeth Keating & Gene Mirus
American Sign Language in Virtual Space: Interactions between Deaf Users of Computer-mediated Video Communication and the Impact of Technology on Language Practices.
Language in Society 32(5):693-714. (2003).
66. Paul V. Kroskrity
Arizona Tewa Kiva Speech as a Manifestation of a Dominant Language Ideology.
In B. B. Schieffelin, K. A. Woolard, & P. V. Kroskrity (eds.), Language Ideologies: Practice and Theory, pp. 103-122. (1998), Oxford: Oxford University Press.
67. Don Kulick
Anger, Gender, Language Shift, and the Politics of Revelation in a Papua New Guinean Village.
In B. B. Schieffelin, K. A. Woolard, & P. V. Kroskrity (eds.), Language Ideologies: Practice and Theory, pp. 87-102. (1998), Oxford: Oxford University Press.
68. Miki Makihara
Linguistic Syncretism and Language Ideologies: Transforming Sociolinguistic Hierarchy on Rapa Nui (Easter Island).
American Anthropologist 106(3):529–540. (2004).
69. Susan U. Philips
Participant Structures and Communicative Competence: Warm Springs Children in Community and Classroom.
In James E. Alatis (ed.), Georgetown University Round Table On Languages and Linguistics (GURT) 1970: Bilingualism and Language Contact, pp. 77-101. (1970), Georgetown: Georgetown University Press.
70. Ben Rampton
Language Crossing and the Problematisation of Ethnicity and Socialization.
Pragmatics 5(4):485-513. (1995).
71. Bambi B. Schieffelin
Marking Time: The Dichotomizing Discourse of Multiple Temporalities.
Current Anthropology 43:5-17. (2002).
72. Michael Silverstein
Encountering Languages and Languages of Encounter in North American Ethnohistory.
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 6(2):126-144. (1997).
73. Debra Spitulnik
The Social Circulation of Media Discourse and the Mediation of Communities.
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 6(2):161-187. (1996).
74. Leigh Swigart
The Limits of Legitimacy: Language Ideology and Shift in Contemporary Senegal.
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 10:90-130. (2001).
75. Jacqueline Urla
Outlaw Language: Creating Alternative Public Spheres in Basque Free Radio.
Pragmatics 5(2):245-261. (1995).
76. Andrew Wong & Qing Zhang
The Linguistic Construction of the Tóngzhì Community.
Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 10(2):248-278. (2001).
77. Kathryn A. Woolard.
Between Friends: Gender, Peer Group Structure and Bilingualism in Urban Catalonia.
Language in Society 26(4):533-560. (1997).
Biography
Edited by Paul Garrett and Bambi Schieffelin






