Language and Society
Language and Society
Language and Society
Smallest element of society is individuals. (Is individual nature or nurture - wrong question, it is
both.) Individual —> self —> group —> society —> world
We’re first human beings then social beings. Society is internal at the beginning. —> Newborn
babies see mother and itself as the same things, it has no sense of self, thus no sense of other.
Then it is external. —> The concept of other starts in the family, the first other is the father, it
sees that mother is not its. This is when the primary socialization starts, in the family. Then the
secondary socialization starts, the adult socialization, in school etc.
What is language ?
Systemic-Functional Grammar (Halliday)
Language is social semiotic -a system of signs to express social meaning in context.
Systemic is interrelated sets of options for meaning-making. Functional is functional. There are
3 linguistic options:
Level of behavior - choice of what one can do
Level of semantics - choice of what one can mean
Grammatical level - choice of what one can say
What is social reality?
It’s not like natural reality, social rules are not like physics rules.
Essentialism V Social constructionism - 2 ends of the spectrum
Essentialism - they believe that human characteristics are most influenced by biological factors,
there’s human nature, an essence
Social Constructionism
In the medieval period, the church was the sole arbiter of truth. But after
Enlightenment, search for truth started.
Modernism (Structuralism) search for truth led to search for rules processing the world, and
there was a belief in a ‘right’ way of doing things, which could be discovered. (Marx, Freud,
Piaget)
Structuralism in Language
Saussure tries to find sturctures in language: sign = signifier + signified (arbitrary). The
meaning of a sign resides not intrinsically in that sign itself, but in its relationship to
other signs.
Postmodernism (Post-structuralism) it rejects the rules and structures underlying in the real
world. Postmodernism emphasizes the co-existence of a multiplicity and variety of situation-
dependent ways of life. Nietzsche claimed that science, reason, progress turned into dogmas
themselves. He took the more nihilistic view that human life is not progressing, that there is no
grand purpose to be discerned.
This is Non-essentialism / Social constructionism. It focuses on small cultures.
Post-structuralism in Language
Language is a site of variability, disagreement and potential conflict, rather than a system
of signs with fixed meanings upon which everyone agrees, as Saussure argued.
Language is a fundamentally social phenomenon; it is something that occurs between
people.
Social Constructionism
Anti-Essentialism
Social constructionism argues that there are no ‘essences’ inside people that make them
what they are. But social constructionism is not just saying that one’s cultural
surroundings have an impact upon one’s psychology. Both of these views are
essentialist.
There is no essence, our knowledge of the world is something people construct between
them. Language is of great interest to social constructionists.
Society is constructed through three stages and language is the essential system to help
us do it:
Externalization- we create cultural products (values, beliefs, material products) through
social interaction. These products become external to those who have produced them.
Social constructs —> manners, holidays, nations, religion, marriage, school,
family, trust, money, humor, motherhood, dressing,
We produce social constructs by reification (The act of changing something
abstract into something real), institutionalisation (like your school is school but
not another building because of prior and ongoing consensus), habitualization
(we accept the society constructed before us, society is a matter of habit),
naturalization
Objectification- then they take on a reality of their own, becoming independent of those
who created them
Internalization- we learn the supposedly "objective facts" through socialization,
Critical realism
Our knowledge of the world is not the reflection of reality but vice versa because we
construct our own versions of reality. All knowledge is derived from looking at the
world from some perspective.
It also opposes what is referred to as positivism and empiricism because they say that
what exists is what we perceive to exist.
Historical and cultural specificity Mainstream psychology asks questions such as: ‘How
are attitudes formed?’, ‘Why do people behave altruistically?’ and ‘How does play influence
children’s development’? The assumption underlying such questions is that we can find an
answer to such questions that applies to all people – we are discovering ‘human nature’.
But social constructionism argues that the ways in which we commonly understand the
world, the categories and concepts we use, are historically and culturally specific. Whether
one understands the world in terms of men and women, children and adults, urban life and
rural life, etc. depends upon where and when in the world one lives.
Large cultures
Ethnic, national or international groups like European, British. Essentialist, culturist perspective
because people tend to find norms in cultures and there is onion-skin relationship. (Sub-culture
is a social group which is perceived to deviate from the normative ideals of adult communities)
Hofstede’s Onion Model of Culture
Culture is defined as the collective mental programming of
the human mind which distinguishes one group of people
from another. This programming influences patterns of
thinking which are reflected in the meaning people attach
to various aspects of life and which become crystallized in
the institutions of a society.
Small cultures
Any cohesive social group like hospital, family, school, organizations. Non-essentialist, non-
culturist because they are to liberate culture from notions of ethnicity and nation and from the
perceptual dangers they carry with them. No onion-skin relationship. -metrobus, escalator
culture, twitter, they exist irrespective of large cultures
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Interculturality
Grammar of Culture
Identity
Modernism & Structuralism Post-modernism & Post-structuralism
Essentialism Non-essentialism
Psychological theories of identity / psycholinguistic approaches to SLL Sociological theories of
identity / approaches to SLL
Then, they started to analyze the language learning from a sociological, anthropological
perspective rather than a psycholinguistic one. (A shift from a focus on linguistic input and
output in SLL to an emphasis on the relationship between the language learner and the larger
social world.)
Social and cultural identities are now kind of the same, and identity is often framed as multiple
and conflictual. But, the remnants of more essentialist notions of identity, which frequently
equate identity with culture, or ethnic identity, still remain.
Multiple features of identity There are many identity markers, being Turkish is one of them.
And for some, it may be primary or secondary. Also, if you are not a nationalist, but your
nationality is being threatened, you may want to state your nationality. So, our identity-claims
may differ in different situations.
Conflictual features of identity My gender identity may conflict with my ideological identity,
or religious identity may contradict with my identity in a social dilemma (Muslim v LGBTQ
activist)
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Otherization
In psychology
In order to exist or survive, one has to make sense of the other (psychological coping
mechanism, it actually has evolutionary background). So, it’s inevitable.
We use all identity markers we studied and a binary system to otherize someone
In sociology
It is socially constructed
First, in-group is created by defining “self, we, us” and always the positive things are
emphasized. Then out-group is created by defining “others, they, them” and always
negative things are emphasized. (The reference point is “self”. If you acknowledge the
positive aspects of the other, then it is not otherization)
This leads to the judgement of superiority and inferiority
There is hierarchy between different kinds of others Upper-class Syrian immigrants
are less otherized than lower-class Syrian immigrants. Nationality is divided by social-
class here.
In linguistics
It is articulated through language
However, “we” does not necessarily imply “other”, in discourse studies. Inclusive we
(Obama’s “Yes, we can” speech) V exclusive we (emphasis on we-they differentiation,
polarization) -language and society perspective
It is also very dynamic.
Orientalism Edward Said demonstrated how the representation of the Eastern World as
passive, mysterious and inferior, has allowed the Western world to define themselves in positive
terms. (the term “exotic” is an orientalist expression)
Occidentalism representation of the Western world as dehumanizing
Eastern people can be Orientalist, just as Western people can be Occidentalist.
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