“I’m only half Korean but I can relate to a lot of what you said”

IF 1.1 Q3 COMMUNICATION
Hanwool Choe, Cynthia Gordon
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Analyzing 20 comments posted in response to YouTube videos wherein two Asian American young women share their “lunchbox moment” stories, or first-person past-oriented accounts of how their (white) classmates at school reacted negatively to food that they brought from home for lunch, we demonstrate how posters collaboratively transform individual offline experiences of marginalization and difference into online moments of inclusion, solidarity, and shared identity. Integrating research on “second stories” (Sacks 1992), “story rounds” (Tannen 2005), online storytelling (Page 2011, 2018), and online-offline interconnections (e.g., Bolander and Locher 2020), we show how commenters of diverse backgrounds accomplish “adequation” (Bucholtz and Hall 2005) between their different minority identities in how they convey their own lunchbox moment stories. By using metadiscursive terms (e.g., “story”), “constructed dialogue” (Tannen 2007), ethnic category mentions, heritage languages, familiar address terms (e.g., first name), and emojis, YouTube posters create inclusion online and across cultural, ethnic, and spaciotemporal lines.
"我只是半个韩国人,但我能体会你说的很多话"
在YouTube视频中,两名亚裔美国年轻女性分享了她们的 "午餐盒时刻 "故事,即她们在学校的(白人)同学如何对她们从家里带来的午餐食物做出负面反应的第一人称过去式叙述。我们分析了针对这些视频张贴的20条评论,展示了海报如何将个人的线下边缘化和差异化经历合作转化为线上包容、团结和共享身份的时刻。结合对 "第二故事"(Sacks,1992 年)、"故事回合"(Tannen,2005 年)、在线讲故事(Page,2011 年,2018 年)和线上线下相互联系(例如,Bolander 和 Locher,2020 年)的研究,我们展示了不同背景的评论者如何在传达自己的午餐时刻故事时,在不同的少数群体身份之间实现 "充分性"(Bucholtz 和 Hall,2005 年)。通过使用元话语(如 "故事")、"建构对话"(Tannen,2007 年)、种族类别提及、遗产语言、熟悉的称呼(如名字)和表情符号,YouTube 发布者在网上创造了跨越文化、种族和时空界限的包容性。
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来源期刊
Internet Pragmatics
Internet Pragmatics Arts and Humanities-Language and Linguistics
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
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