Language Migration and Identity Neighborhood Talk in Indonesia 1st Edition by Zane Goebel – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 978-1107642515, 1107642515
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 1107642515
ISBN 13: 978-1107642515
Author: Zane Goebel
While much scholarship has been devoted to the interplay between language, identity and social relationships, we know less about how this plays out interactionally in diverse transient settings. Based on research in Indonesia, this book examines how talk plays an important role in mediating social relations in two urban spaces where linguistic and cultural diversity is the norm and where distinctions between newcomers and old timers changes regularly. How do people who do not share expectations about how they should behave build new expectations through participating in conversation? Starting from a view of language-society dynamics as enregisterment, Zane Goebel uses interactional sociolinguistics and the ethnography of communication to explore how language is used in this contact setting to build and present identities, expectations and social relations. It will be welcomed by researchers and students working in the fields of linguistic anthropology, sociolinguistics, the anthropology of migration and Asian studies.
Table of contents:
1 Introduction
1.0 Introduction
1.1 Layout of the book
1.2 Fieldwork in two wards
2 Long-term Processes of Enregisterment
2.0 Introduction
2.1 Interaction, semiotic registers, and enregisterment
2.2 Enregisterment: From colonial to New Order Indonesia
2.3 Government policy, regional languages, and schooling
2.4 Popular television and enregisterment in late New Order Indonesia
2.5 Ethnicity and Chineseness
2.6 Conclusions
3 Enregistering Local Practices and Local Spaces
3.0 Introduction
3.1 The genesis of local wards
3.2 Trajectories of socialization in Ward 5
3.3 Trajectories of socialization in Ward 8
3.4 Conclusions
4 Linguistic Signs, Alternation, Crossing, and Adequation
4.0 Introduction
4.1 Classification of lexical signs
4.2 Lexical form knowledge and use
4.3 Learning Javanese
4.4 Conclusions
5 Women, Narratives, Identity, and Expectations in Ward 8
5.0 Introduction
5.1 Narratives and processes of social identification
5.2 Initial processes of social identification in a female meeting
5.3 Narratives, collusion, identity and negative affect
5.4 Publicly co-constructing self, other, and expectations for social conduct
5.5 Conclusions
6 Learning to Become a Good Ward Member
6.0 Introduction
6.1 Enregisterment across speech situations
6.2 Linguistic sign exchanges, interactional histories and meta-pragmatics
6.3 Conclusions
7 Emerging Identities in a Monthly Ward 8 Male Meeting
7.0 Introduction
7.1 Widely and locally circulating signs of personhood
7.2 Narratives, medium choice and social identification
7.3 Patterns of linguistic sign exchange
7.4 Conclusions
8 Chineseness as Deviance
8.0 Introduction
8.1 (Re)establishing finances and social relations
8.2 Chineseness as deviance
8.3 Linguistic sign exchanges and interactional histories
8.4 Conclusions
9 Language Ideologies and Practice in Ward 5
9.0 Introduction
9.1 Intra-ethnic talk in a card game
9.2 Habitual intra-ethnic linguistic sign exchanges and local histories
9.3 Inter-ethnic talk in a card game
9.4 Habitual inter-ethnic linguistic sign exchanges and local histories
9.5 Conclusions
10 Conclusions
10.0 Introduction
10.1 A brief recapitulation
10.2 Approaching migration, migrants and interaction in a transient setting
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Tags: Zane Goebel, Language Migration, Identity Neighborhood


