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Page 1: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Space

Page 2: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Three questions

• What is space?• How do we locate our studies in space?• How does space function in the

construction of meaning in variation?

Page 3: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Why do sociolinguists talk about speechcommunities?

• delimiting a population.

• delimiting a variety (or varieties).

• locating the social structure thatstructures (or explains) the diversity oflanguage use.

Page 4: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

The speech community

• Delimited by the aims of the study, not by anindependent definition of speech community.

• Defines a center (Pratt 1987)

• Defines the universe in which the meaning ofvariation will be interpreted.

Page 5: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Dialect space … our dialectology roots

Page 6: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Local Identity

What does it mean to be a Vineyarder?

Labov, W. (1963). "The social motivation of a sound change." Word 18: 1-42.

Page 7: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

What does it mean to call these speechcommunities?

• Martha’s Vineyard, Cane Walk,Soulan

• New York City• Belten High• Japan

Page 8: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Place, Space and Identity

• “Culture” understood as “naturally” discontinuousspaces

• Isomorphism of space, place, and culture• “Cultural differences” within a locality

Gupta and Ferguson, “Beyond ‘Culture’: Space, Identity,and the Politics of Difference”

the power of the topography conceals the topography of power

Page 9: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

The topography of power

• Globalization• Transnationalism• The notion of “the local” (“the local

identity,” “the vernacular”)

Page 10: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

What if we begin with thepremises• that spaces have always been

hierarchically interconnected, instead ofnaturally disconnected

• Cultural difference not a matter of culturalcontact and articulation but one ofrethinking difference through connection

Page 11: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Away from seeing cultural differenceas the correlate of a world of“peoples” whose separate historieswait to be bridged by theanthropolgist and toward seeing itas aproduct of shared historicalprocess that diffrentiates the worldas it connects it (Gupta andFerguson 1997:46)

Page 12: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Penny says

• It is not enough to describe a speech community asan isolated unit, for no community is isolable; thedescription of a speech community is mostimportantly an account of that community’s linguisticplace in the wider society. AN account of a speechcommunity, then, will optimally account for thearticulation between the internal dynamics of thespeech community and its relation to other localities(2000:34).

Page 13: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Scapes•A framework for exploring “certain fundamental disjuncturesbetween economy, culture, and politics,” exploring five dimensionsunified by the common suffix “-scape.”•“-scape” is used to indicate “that these are not objectively givenrelations which look the same from every angle of vision, but ratherthat they are deeply perspectival constructs, inflected very much bythe historical, linguistic and political situatedness of different sorts ofactors…” (296)

Appadurai, Arjun1990. Disjuncture and Difference in the Global CulturalEconomy. Theory, Culture & Society 7. 295-310.

Page 14: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Appadurai’s scapes• Ethnoscapes

– “the landscape of persons who constitute theshifting world in which we live: tourists,immigrants, refugees, exiles, guestworkers andother moving groups and persons” (297)

• Technoscapes– “the global configuration, also ever fluid, of

technology, and of the fact that technology, bothhigh and low, both mechanical and informational,now moves at high speeds across various kinds ofpreviously impervious boundaries” (297)

Page 15: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

• Financescapes– the disposition and configuration of capital, as currency

markets, national stock exchanges, and commodityspeculations move vast amounts of capital fluidly acrossborders

–“the global relationship between ethnoscapes,technoscapes, and financescapes is deeply disjunctiveand profoundly unpredictable, since each of theselandscapes in subject to its own constraints andincentives […], at the same time as each acts as aconstraint and a parameter for movements in the other”(298)

Page 16: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

• Mediascapes– Both “the distribution of electronic capabilities to produce

and disseminate information” and “the images of the worldcreated by these media” (298-9)

• Newpapers, magazines, television stations and programs, filmproduction studios

• Ideoscapes– Like mediascapes, also chains of images, “but they are often

directly political and frequently have to do with the ideologiesof states and the counter-ideologies of movements explicitlyoriented to capturing state power as a piece of it.” (299)

• e.g. “freedom,” “welfare,” “rights,” “sovereignty,” “democracy”

Page 17: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

“Other” modes of belonging

• Cosmpolitanism• Postmodern nostaligia• Media public space• Transit subjects

Page 18: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

“What does it mean, at the end of the twentiethcentury, to speak…of a native land? Whatprocesses rather than essence are involved inpresent experiences of cultural identity? (JamesClifford, The Predicament of Culture, Cambridge,Mass: Harvard University Press, 1988), p. 275.

Page 19: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

POINTS TO MAKE

• Space is not power-neutral• The relationship between the local and

the global (see Johnstone)• Deessentialize the notion of “the local”

– Internal– external

Page 20: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Rhotacization of finals

Zhang, Q. (2005). "A Chinese yuppie in Beijing: Phonological variationand the construction of a new professional identity." Language insociety.

'flower' hua [hua] 花 < huar [hua] 花儿

Page 21: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

local personae and iconization

Zhang, Qing. In preparation. The smoothness of Beijing speech.Journal of Sociolinguistics.

The Smooth Operator. Urban male character type

“Have you ever heard anybody saying the Cantonesehave “oily accent, slippery tone”? That’s because theirtongues can’t curl.”

Page 22: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

One has to acknowledge the fact that Beijing is ametropolis. It is the political center of the country andalso has an advanced commercial economy. Thestink of money from commercialism, the mentality ofprofit-before-everything, has been absorbed into theancient culture and civilization of Beijing, whichleads to the formation of another mentality ofBeijingers ミ particularly among the inhabitants oflower social strata: smoothness [youhua].Thus,"Beijing Smooth Operator" is nationally well-known.

Page 23: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

% interdental /z/

Zhang, Q. (2005). "A Chinese yuppie in Beijing: Phonological variationand the construction of a new professional identity." Language insociety.

Page 24: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

% full tone in Beijing Mandarin

Zhang, Q. (2005). "A Chinese yuppie in Beijing: Phonological variationand the construction of a new professional identity." Language insociety.

Page 25: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Beijing Manager Styles

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0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

Rhotacization Lenition Interdental Full Tone

female yuppie

male yuppie

female state

male state

Page 26: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography
Page 27: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

network

Page 28: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Kids at Steps Elementary

• Going public– class trips– going to the mall– going to Stanford

Page 29: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography
Page 30: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Geography as meaning

• The international level– Brits and /t/ release

• The regional level– The US South

• The local level– [rʌjt]

Page 31: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Michiganders’ evaluations of northern/southern speech

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Page 32: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Not just northerners ..Texans’ evaluations of northerners and southerners

White, Jessica and Kathleen Shaw. 2004. The North, the South, and Texas: Linguisticand regional perception from the Lone Star State. A paper presented at NWAV (NewWays of Analyzing Variation). Ann Arbor. (cited in Preston ms.)

• Northerners superior in: intelligence, education,ambition, talent, success and proper English.

• Southerners superior in: honesty, friendliness,trustworthiness, down-to-earthness, casualness,community, politeness, and large families. BadEnglish

Page 33: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Oregonians’ evaluations of regional speech

Hartley, Laura. (1999). A view from the west: Perceptions of U.S. dialectregions by Oregon residents. Handbook of perceptual dialectology. D. R.Preston. Amsterdam, Benjamins: 315-32.

Page 34: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

And no, I wouldn’t hang out with him. Although I will tellyou since this is a linguistic study that, um people dolike to say that once you hear Southern accent youhave to subtract several intelligence points justbecause of the accent which is unfortunate; ‘causethere are a lot of, um smart Southern people, and theyhave accent but people think of the Southern accentas being dumb. It just sounds dumb to a lot of people.

Campbell-Kibler, K. (2007). "Accent, (ING), and the social logic of listenerperceptions." American speech. 82(1): 32-64.

Page 35: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

Region and (ING)

Campbell-Kibler, K. (2007). "Accent, (ING), and the social logic of listenerperceptions." American speech. 82(1): 32-64.

The -in form enhances perceived Southern accentsand shares with them associations with the country,lack of education, and the image of the redneck. Ina different performance, the -ing variantstrengthens an accent associated with being gay ormetrosexual, with the city, and with lessmasculinity.

Page 36: space - Stanford Universityweb.stanford.edu/~eckert/Institute2007/PDF/space.pdfand the Politics of Difference” the power of the topography conceals the topography of power The topography

‘natural’ -ing speakers

So I think it sounds more natural for her to say -ing.Hiking. Hikin’ just - it just doesn’t mesh well with the restof the sentence. But I mean if she did, if she were, if I didhave a true situation in which she was saying - whichshe was saying hiking or sorry hikin’ with i-n on the endof it? It would sound as though she’s trying, she’s maybearound somebody Southern, and she’s trying to beSouthern or trying to be a little bit too laid-back relaxedlinguistically.

Campbell-Kibler, K. (2007). "Accent, (ING), and the social logic of listenerperceptions." American speech. 82(1): 32-64.