This preface introduces the book "Living Language" which aims to provide an accessible introduction to linguistic anthropology. It discusses the complex nature of studying real-world language use. The book is intended for students and other academics who want to learn about linguistic anthropology's concepts and tools for understanding language as social practice. It explains the book's structure and overview of linguistic anthropology as a field within cultural anthropology in the US. The preface emphasizes the importance of analyzing language data as communicative events rather than transparent representations of facts.
This preface introduces the book "Living Language" which aims to provide an accessible introduction to linguistic anthropology. It discusses the complex nature of studying real-world language use. The book is intended for students and other academics who want to learn about linguistic anthropology's concepts and tools for understanding language as social practice. It explains the book's structure and overview of linguistic anthropology as a field within cultural anthropology in the US. The preface emphasizes the importance of analyzing language data as communicative events rather than transparent representations of facts.
This preface introduces the book "Living Language" which aims to provide an accessible introduction to linguistic anthropology. It discusses the complex nature of studying real-world language use. The book is intended for students and other academics who want to learn about linguistic anthropology's concepts and tools for understanding language as social practice. It explains the book's structure and overview of linguistic anthropology as a field within cultural anthropology in the US. The preface emphasizes the importance of analyzing language data as communicative events rather than transparent representations of facts.
This preface introduces the book "Living Language" which aims to provide an accessible introduction to linguistic anthropology. It discusses the complex nature of studying real-world language use. The book is intended for students and other academics who want to learn about linguistic anthropology's concepts and tools for understanding language as social practice. It explains the book's structure and overview of linguistic anthropology as a field within cultural anthropology in the US. The preface emphasizes the importance of analyzing language data as communicative events rather than transparent representations of facts.
Language as used in real-life social contexts is fascinating but extremely
challenging to study. Linguistic anthropology as a discipline offers a set of concepts and tools for undertaking this challenge. My goal in this book is to provide an accessible introduction to the main princi ples and approaches o f linguistic anthropology w ithout overly simpli fying the complex contributions o f scholars in the field. To the degree that this book succeeds in accomplishing this goal, it will be useful not just to graduate and undergraduate students studying linguistic anthro pology for the first time (to w hom I very much hope to com m uni cate my enthusiasm for the field) but also to all sorts of other readers w ho m ight for various reasons be interested in “living language” These readers might include, for example, cultural anthropologists, sociologists, or political scientists who have never looked closely at language in their research but could benefit from doing so. I also hope the book will be o f value to linguists whose work thus far has been more technical and abstract in nature but who would like to turn their attention to the study of actual instances of linguistic practice. And finally, I hope the book will appeal to anyone who has a natural curiosity about the central role language plays in shaping and reflect ing cultural norms and social interactions. W ithin the United States, linguistic anthropology is one o f the four traditional fields of anthropology: archaeology, biological (also called physical) anthropology, cultural anthropology, and linguistic anthro pology. W hen Franz Boas helped to establish the discipline o f anthro pology in the U nited States more than one hundred years ago, most anthropologists were trained in all four of these fields and often Preface
conducted research in more than one of them. As scholarship became
more specialized over the past century, however, such breadth became much rarer. O ne of my main purposes in w riting this book is to convince anthropologists in other subfields, especially cultural anthropology, of the advantages of becom ing well-trained in linguistic anthropology as well as their “hom e” subdiscipline. After all, much of the data collected by cultural anthropologists (and by many research ers in other fields) is linguistic in nature. Linguistic anthropologists (e.g., Briggs 1986:22) have argued that such data should not be treated as a transparent window through which the researcher can reach to obtain facts or information. Rather, interviews and other sources of data for social scientists should be considered as communicative events in which meanings are co-constructed and interwoven with various forms o f context. This book will, I hope, provide useful tools and examples of analyses that help researchers produce nuanced analyses of many different kinds of social and linguistic practices. I should say a few words about nomenclature and the sometimes arbitrary nature of disciplinary boundaries. Anthropology as a disci pline is not found in every university in the United States and certainly not in every country around the world. Sometimes it is subsumed under sociology; other times individual anthropologists work in aca demic departments ranging from political science to educational psychology. Linguistic anthropology as a subdiscipline is even more specific to the U nited States and is rarely identified as such in other countries. And yet, the core themes and approaches of linguistic anthropology as set forth in this book are ever more commonly at the forefront of cutting-edge research in many different fields, even when “linguistic anthropology” as such is not the label under which the research takes place. In the United Kingdom,for example,“linguistic ethnography” has become increasingly popular as a term describing the work of scholars who study language ethnographically, as linguistic anthropologists generally do (cf. Creese 2008). Some sociolinguists, who usually hold PhDs in the discipline of linguistics rather than anthropology or sociology (though there are exceptions), also produce scholarship very much in keeping with the approaches 1 describe in this book. In addition, linguistic anthropologists themselves have sometimes used other terms to label what they do, such as anthropo logical linguistics, ethnolinguistics, or “anthropolitical” linguistics, and Preface
many researchers produce im portant and relevant work in other related
fields such as pragmatics, sociopolitical linguistics, discourse analysis, rhetoric, applied linguistics, or communication (Duranti 1997, 2003, forthcoming; Zentella 1996). I draw upon the work of many of these scholars in this book, along with researchers in other fields. W hile I consider myself firmly rooted in linguistic anthropology, I share with Mary Bucholtz and Kira Hall (2008) a desire to take an “all of the above” approach to the study of linguistic practices in real-life social contexts. There is nothing to be lost and everything to be gained, in my opinion, from engaging in a cross-disciplinary dialogue. As valuable as I find much of the research on language from all these different fields, 1 do attempt to differentiate the approach I advocate from an approach that considers language solely as an abstract set of grammatical rules, detached from any actual linguistic interaction. Linguistic structure and the insights surrounding it that have emerged from the discipline of linguistics since first Ferdinand de Saussure and then Noam Chomsky began to dominate the field so many decades ago are extremely important to most linguistic anthropologists, but as Chomsky’s hegemonic grip on linguistics as a discipline has begun to weaken, there is even more reason to offer the approach presented in this book —that of treating language use as a form of social action - as an alternative that can either complement or cause a reconceptualiza tion of Chomsky’s perspective on language. Ideally, scholars who con sider linguistic practices to be a form of social action will be able to make use of the most valuable findings on linguistic structure conducted in a Chomskyan manner while also paying close attention to the ways in which such practices are embedded in webs of social hierarchies and identities.This is a challenging task. As Michael Silverstein has noted, it can lead to “the same feeling one has in that sitcom situation of standing with one foot on the dock and another in the boat as the tide rushes away from shore” (2006:275). Silverstein goes on to state the following: The serious metaphorical point here is that it takes a great deal ot bod ily force to keep standing upright, with one foot firmly planted in lan guage as a structured code and the other in language as a medium of the various sociocultural lifeways of human groups and their emergently precipitated sociohistorical macrostructures at several orders of magni tude. (2006:275) Preface
The goal of this book is to provide some concrete assistance in the
form of theoretical insights, methodological tools, and ethnographic examples for those who would like to remain standing upright —those w ho wish to look closely at language both in terms of its grammatical patterning and in terms of its role in the shaping of social life. Living Language is divided into three parts, each of which is com prised of four chapters. In the first part, “Language: Some Basic Questions,” I explain how language use can be conceived of, and pro ductively studied as, a form of social action. The introductory chapter, “The Socially Charged Life of Language,” presents four key terms that will act as anchors for readers as they proceed through the ensuing chapters. These four key terms — multifunctionality, language ideologies, practice, and indexicality - can be applied in many different social contexts to obtain a deeper understanding of how language works. Chapter 2, “The Research Process in Linguistic Anthropology,” describes the many different methods linguistic anthropologists use to conduct their research and discusses some of the practical and ethical dilemmas many research ers face when studying language in real-life situations. Chapter 3, “Language Acquisition and Socialization,” focuses on the way that lin guistic anthropologists study how young children learn their first language (s) at the same time that they are being socialized into appro priate cultural practices. This way of understanding linguistic and cul tural practices as being thoroughly intertwined can also apply to adolescents and adults who engage in language socialization whenever they enter new social or professional contexts. Chapter 4, the final chap ter in the first part of the book, “Language, Thought, and Culture,” looks at some of the controversies and foundational principles underly ing the so-called “Sapir—W horf Hypothesis” and the ways in which language relates to thought and culture. The second part of the book, “Com m unities o f Speakers, Hearers, Readers, and W riters,” moves on from these basic questions to con sider the constitution o f various forms of linguistic and social com munities. Chapter 5, “Com m unities o f Language Users,” explores the concept o f “speech com m unity” and surveys some of the scholarship on this topic, concluding with a discussion o f the valuable alternative concept o f “com m unity o f practice.” Chapter 6, “Multilingualism and Globalization,” places these communities in a global context to dem onstrate how im portant it is to consider multilingualism in individuals Preface
and communities when conducting research on linguistic or social
practices anywhere in the world. Chapter 7, “Literacy Practices,” makes a case for the importance of looking at the interwoven nature o f literacy and orality. Many linguistic anthropologists focus solely on spoken language, but studying literacy practices in conjunction with verbal interactions can be quite illuminating. Chapter 8,“Performance, Performativity, and the Constitution of Communities,” the final chap ter in the second part of the book, disentangles the various theoretical and ethnographic approaches to performance and performativity and discusses the importance o f these themes for understanding how lin guistic and social communities come to be formed. The final part of the book, “Language, Power, and Social Differentiation,” moves more deeply into the constitution of actual communities by examining various dimensions of social and linguis tic differentiation and inequality within particular communities. Chapter 9, “Language and Gender,” explores some com m on language ideologies concerning the ways in which wom en and men speak and reviews the research on the complex nature o f gendered linguistic practices. Chapter 10, “Language, Race, and Ethnicity,” engages with two other com m on forms of social and linguistic differentiation, that of racialization and ethnicization. This chapter describes the rule-governed nature of African American English, the Ebonics controversy of 1996—1997, and the racializing aspects o f M ock Spanish. Chapter 11, “Language Death and Revitalization,” looks at the rea sons why so many of the world’s languages are endangered and asks what social inequalities and language ideologies underpin these dis courses o f endangerm ent.The concluding chapter, “Language, Power, and Agency,” pulls together the threads of the previous chapters to present a view of linguistic practices as embedded within power dynamics and subject to various forms of agency. This chapter pro vides an overview of the social theorists, including Raym ond Williams, Michel Foucault, Sherry Ortner, and Pierre Bourdieu, who are in my view the most useful for developing a deeper understanding of lan guage, power, agency, and social action. In sum, this book is meant to be an invitation to all readers to explore more fully the notion that to use language is always to engage in a form of social action. Embarking on this exploration will lead to a better appreciation for what “living language” can mean.