What is a dialect? What is a standard?: shifting indexicality and persistent ideological norms

Judit Kroo
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Abstract

This paper examines the ways in which the indexical meanings that attach to enregistered speaking styles are debated and contested in interaction by younger Japanese adults. Contested meanings include discourses of so-called hyoojungo ‘Standard Japanese’ and the speaking styles that are collectively described as ‘Okinawan dialect’, which are associated with the islands of Okinawa Prefecture in Japan. This paper uses data from casual conversations between younger male adults who were all born and raised in Okinawa Prefecture but moved to the main island of Honshu for university. Discourse analysis of these conversations demonstrates how these younger adults negotiate the social meanings attached to Okinawan speaking styles, linking them to broader ideologies of so-called hyoojungo as well as gendered styles, and reproducing normative ideologies of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ speech. Homing in on moments in which these speech styles are negotiated, the results of this paper emphasize the persistence of normative linguistic ideologies even as the meaning and content of linguistic styles are being re-imagined.
什么是方言?什么是标准?
本文研究了日本年轻成年人在互动中辩论和争论登记口语风格的索引意义的方式。有争议的含义包括所谓的 "标准日语"(hyoojungo)和被统称为 "冲绳方言"(Okinawan dialect)的说话方式,它们都与日本冲绳县的岛屿有关。本文使用的数据来自年轻男性成年人之间的闲聊,他们都在冲绳县出生和长大,但后来搬到本州本岛上大学。对这些对话的话语分析表明,这些年轻的成年人是如何协商冲绳口语风格的社会意义的,如何将其与所谓的 "hyoojungo "以及性别风格等更广泛的意识形态联系起来,以及如何再现 "好 "和 "坏 "言语的规范意识形态。本文的研究结果聚焦于这些语言风格被协商的时刻,强调即使语言风格的意义和内容正在被重新想象,规范的语言意识形态依然存在。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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