“RIP English”: Race, class and ‘good English’ in India

IF 1.8 2区 文学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Katy Highet
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article explores how metapragmatic discourses on “good” and “bad” English in India are mobilized in ways that allow actors to negotiate their status as English speakers. Adopting an intersectional framework that highlights the relationality of colonial, racialized, and classed claims to authority, the article shows how the co-naturalization of language and race shapes assessments of competency and legitimacy and how this is mitigated through anti-Blackness and appeals to class status. These judgments of “good” and “bad” English work to reassert and undermine racialized authority over the language and position actors within an imagined, global stratified community of speakers. This ambivalent positioning not only helps actors negotiate relational legitimacy as English speakers but also works strategically to benefit certain speakers and reproduce colonial, class, and racial orders.

“安息英语”:印度的种族、阶级和“好英语”
本文探讨了在印度,关于“好”和“坏”英语的元语用话语是如何被动员起来的,从而使演员能够协商自己作为英语使用者的地位。本文采用了一个交叉的框架,强调了殖民主义、种族化和阶级化对权威的要求之间的关系,展示了语言和种族的共同归化如何塑造了对能力和合法性的评估,以及如何通过反黑人和诉诸阶级地位来缓解这种情况。这些对英语“好”和“坏”的判断,重新确立和削弱了对语言的种族化权威,并将演员置于一个想象中的、全球分层的语言群体中。这种矛盾的定位不仅有助于演员协商作为英语使用者的关系合法性,而且在战略上也有利于某些使用者,并再现殖民、阶级和种族秩序。
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
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
25.00%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: The Journal of Linguistic Anthropology explores the many ways in which language shapes social life. Published with the journal"s pages are articles on the anthropological study of language, including analysis of discourse, language in society, language and cognition, and language acquisition of socialization. The Journal of Linguistic Anthropology is published semiannually.
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