Divided Values, Shadow Languages: Positioning and Perspective in Linguistic Ideologies

IF 1 4区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
Signs and Society Pub Date : 2018-01-01 DOI:10.1086/695142
J. T. Irvine
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引用次数: 18

Abstract

“Linguistic ideology,” a field of inquiry opened by Michael Silverstein, has become a major topic in semiotically oriented disciplines. This article focuses on an important aspect of ideology (linguistic or otherwise): its connection with social positioning, point of view, and differentiation. Two sets of examples, mainly from fieldwork in Senegal, are drawn upon to illustrate that connection. One set concerns people living in the same community but differing in the ideologized values and projects through which they interpret linguistic practices. The other set concerns people who are relative strangers, speaking languages that are not their native tongues—in ways that can reveal Whorfian effects from the native language that rests in the background. Although these two sets of examples are initially drawn upon to emphasize different points, the article argues that they differ more in degree than in kind. Both illustrate how social positioning is tied to differences in ideologized interpretation and, more generally, that where there is ideology, there is differentiation.
分裂的价值观、影子语言:语言意识形态的定位与透视
“语言意识形态”是迈克尔·西尔弗斯坦开辟的一个研究领域,已成为符号学学科的一个主要话题。本文关注意识形态的一个重要方面(语言或其他方面):它与社会定位、观点和差异的联系。主要来自塞内加尔实地调查的两组例子说明了这种联系。其中一组涉及生活在同一社区的人,但他们解释语言实践的意识形态价值观和项目不同。另一组涉及相对陌生的人,他们说的语言不是他们的母语——以某种方式可以揭示背景中母语的沃尔夫效应。尽管这两组例子最初是为了强调不同的观点,但文章认为,它们在程度上的差异大于种类上的差异。两者都说明了社会定位如何与意识形态解释的差异联系在一起,更普遍地说,哪里有意识形态,哪里就有差异。
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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来源期刊
Signs and Society
Signs and Society Multiple-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
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