22.2506, Diss: Socioling: Mallinson: 'The Dynamic Construction of Race, ...'

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LINGUIST List: Vol-22-2506. Thu Jun 16 2011. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 22.2506, Diss: Socioling: Mallinson: 'The Dynamic Construction of Race, ...'

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1)
Date: 15-Jun-2011
From: Christine Mallinson [mallinson at umbc.edu]
Subject: The Dynamic Construction of Race, Class, and Gender through Linguistic Practice among Women in a Black Appalachian Community
 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Thu, 16 Jun 2011 14:04:33
From: Christine Mallinson [mallinson at umbc.edu]
Subject: The Dynamic Construction of Race, Class, and Gender through Linguistic Practice among Women in a Black Appalachian Community

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Institution: North Carolina State University 
Program: Linguistic Program 
Dissertation Status: Completed 
Degree Date: 2006 

Author: Christine Mallinson

Dissertation Title: The Dynamic Construction of Race, Class, and Gender through 
Linguistic Practice among Women in a Black Appalachian
Community 

Linguistic Field(s): Sociolinguistics


Dissertation Director(s):
Walt Wolfram

Dissertation Abstract:

This dissertation conceptualizes and analyzes the dynamic construction of
race, class, and gender through linguistic practice in a way that
integrates the sociological study of social organization with the study of
language in its social context.  I illustrate the efficacy of the approach
in its application to a field study of the black Southern Appalachian
community of Texana, North Carolina.  I begin by contextualizing the
setting using qualitative evidence from naturalistic observation and
interviews with residents.  I then focus on the social and linguistic
habits of two groups of four women in the community.  Drawing from
observation and interviews, I analyze qualitative data on the groups'
contemporary situations, shared memories, and ways of life. The qualitative
data provides content for interpreting quantitative analyses of
sociolinguistic data with regard to race, class, and gender identities.
Drawing on both data sources, I show that the two groups of women exhibit
distinctions based on lifestyle and presentation that divide them into
discrete status groups. I thus provide evidence to show how social status
is articulated with local character, in everyday practice, but is also
rooted in the system of stratification in ways that intersect with gender,
race, and language. My findings exemplify how agentive social actors use
language as symbolic vehicles in daily interaction, in concert with other
social practices, to constitute intersecting social structures. I draw
these conclusions from within an integrative framework that incorporates
three bodies of social theory: intersectionality and structuration theories
from sociology and community of practice theory as it has developed within
variationist sociolinguistics. In framing variationist sociolinguistics
with two bodies of current social theory, I establish viable avenues for
cross-disciplinary collaboration and insight. 







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