Regan, Vera; Ní Chasaide, Caitríona (eds). 2010. Language practices and identity construction by multilingual speakers of French L2. (original) (raw)

Book Reviews:Language Ideologies: Practice and Theory

Journal of Linguistic Anthropology, 2001

to several well-known popular books by her student Deborah Tannen, whose work Lakoff does refer to, there are other nonspecialist books that deal with the roles of language in public life, such as Deborah Cameron's Verbal Hygiene (Routledge, 1996) and English With An Accent: Language, Ideology and Discrimination in The United States by Rosina lippi-Green (Routledge, 1997), as well as a growing number of textbook level discussions of systematic methods for using linguistic discourse analysis in service of cultural critique.

Indeterminacy and regularization: a process-based approach to the study of sociolinguistic variation and language ideologies

"is article explores the concept of indeterminacy as a fundamental property of social life (Falk-Moore 1978) as it relates to key issues in sociolinguistic theory: the relationship between structure and agency and the way that linguistic signs are invested with social meanings. Indeterminacy emerges as a fundamental principle of sociolinguistic variables, context, speaker identity and participation structures, as a resource for speakers and as a possible objective of communicative practice. It stands in constant tension with processes of sociolinguistic regularization, as it is instantiated across texts, time and discourses and as it is embedded in particular social and political #elds. "e article argues that studying this tension is how a contemporary sociolinguistics can approach a coherent account of agency and constraint, change and continuity, reproduction and contestation of normative practices and dominant language ideologies.

The Routledge Handbook of Sociolinguistics around the World edited by Martin J. Ball

Journal of Sociolinguistics, 2011

(Chapter 1) provides insights into highly diverse sociolinguistic research in the United States and proposes a distinction between two broad, overlapping areas: the sociolinguistics of society (region and dialectology; ethnicity; sexuality and gender; language change/age; community groupings; multilingualism; perception studies) and the sociolinguistics of language (phonology and phonetics; morphology and syntax; lexicon, mental grammar and language acquisition; pragmatics, discourse, and conversation). Hazen's overview ends with a call for a greater integration of sociolinguistics driven by a 'motivation towards a unified goal' (p. 7). It must be said that the rest of the book does not achieve this integrative aim with most chapters biased towards one or the other approach. The Canadian sociolinguistic situation (Chapter 2 by Elaine Gold) is selectively described with reference to the English-and French-languages communities. As a relatively new but expanding field, sociolinguistic research in Mexico (Chapter 3) has developed within three distinct paradigms-anthropological linguistic, variationist sociolinguistics, and most recently the 'sociolinguistics of conflict'-but, as explained by José Antonio Flores Farfán, an imbalance remains with more studies examining Spanish rather than the indigenous languages of Mexico. The author subsequently gives a taste of future research directions in an area he labels as 'militant sociolinguistics' (p. 39), by explaining the need to address difficulties and challenges of linguistic and cultural revitalization initiatives of endangered languages in Mexico. The sociolinguistics of language endangerment and revitalization is also discussed in Chapter 4 on South America. Serafin Coronel-Molina and Viviana Quinteros overview the Andean Quechuaspeaking communities mainly from the vantage point of language contact with Spanish and Quechua. In Chapter 5, Valerie Youssef describes sociolinguistic research in the Anglophone Caribbean area. Following an overview of Creole studies, Youssef discusses the emergence of new influences on Carribean

William K. Riley & David M. Smiths, eds, Sociolinguistics (Languages and linguistics working papers, number 5). Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 1972.David M. Smith and Roger W. Shuy, eds, Sociolinguistics in cross-cultural perspective. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press,...

Language in Society, 1974

JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact