Ali Wong 的《眼镜蛇宝宝》中的非裔美国人英语、种族化女性特质和亚裔美国人身份认同

IF 1.5 1区 文学 Q2 LINGUISTICS
Kendra Calhoun, Joyhanna Yoo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们通过特定流派的视角,分析亚裔喜剧演员黄雅莉在其2016年单口相声特辑《眼镜蛇宝宝》中的语言和具身表演,研究单口相声的表演惯例如何塑造了她的喜剧角色。我们认为,黄氏利用与黑人相关的交际形式来表演种族化和性别化的人格形象,包括白人 "凯伦"、"时髦的黑人女性 "和 "亚洲祖母"。这种表演允许黄挑战霸权白人和对亚洲女性的主流种族化,但所依赖的符号有可能被解释为再现了反黑人的意识形态。我们将黄作为一个个体表演者,将 "亚裔美国人 "作为一个相对于黑人的种族类别,并将亚裔和美国黑人社区的语言实践置于形成了当代种族语言意识形态的种族资本主义历史之中。我们没有将语言种类和种族化群体视为必然不同的群体,而是将它们视为一种关系--一种必然存在的密切的历史联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

African American English, racialized femininities, and Asian American identity in Ali Wong's Baby Cobra

African American English, racialized femininities, and Asian American identity in Ali Wong's Baby Cobra

We analyze Asian American comedian Ali Wong's linguistic and embodied performance in her 2016 stand-up special, Baby Cobra, through a genre-specific lens to investigate how stand-up comedy's performance conventions shape her comedic persona. We argue that Wong uses communicative forms indexically associated with Blackness to perform racialized and gendered figures of personhood, including the white “Karen,” “sassy Black woman,” and “Asian grandmother.” This performance allows Wong to challenge hegemonic whiteness and dominant racializations of Asian women but relies on signs potentially interpreted as reproducing anti-Black ideologies. We situate Wong as an individual performer, “Asian American” as an ethnoracial category vis-à-vis Blackness, and the linguistic practices of Asian and Black American communities within racial capitalist histories that have shaped contemporary raciolinguistic ideologies. Rather than approach language varieties and racialized groups as necessarily distinct, we treat them as relational—as necessarily intimately and historically connected.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
10.50%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: Journal of Sociolinguistics promotes sociolinguistics as a thoroughly linguistic and thoroughly social-scientific endeavour. The journal is concerned with language in all its dimensions, macro and micro, as formal features or abstract discourses, as situated talk or written text. Data in published articles represent a wide range of languages, regions and situations - from Alune to Xhosa, from Cameroun to Canada, from bulletin boards to dating ads.
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