LINGUIST List 19.3256
|
Tue Oct 28 2008
Diss: Anthro Ling/Disc Analysis/Socioling: DuBord: 'Performing Bili...'
Editor for this issue: Evelyn Richter
<evelyn linguistlist.org>
|
To post to LINGUIST, use our convenient web form at
http://linguistlist.org/LL/posttolinguist.html.
|
Directory
1. Elise
DuBord,
Performing Bilingualism: An ethnographic analysis of discursive practices at a day labor center in the Southwest
Message 1: Performing Bilingualism: An ethnographic analysis of discursive practices at a day labor center in the Southwest
|
Date: 28-Oct-2008
From: Elise DuBord <edubord drew.edu>
Subject: Performing Bilingualism: An ethnographic analysis of discursive practices at a day labor center in the Southwest
E-mail this message to a friend
Institution: University of Arizona
Program: Department of Spanish and Portuguese
Dissertation Status: Completed
Degree Date: 2008
Author: Elise M. DuBord
Dissertation Title: Performing Bilingualism: An ethnographic analysis of discursive practices at a day labor center in the Southwest
Linguistic Field(s):
Anthropological Linguistics
Discourse Analysis
Sociolinguistics
Dissertation Director:
Ana Maria Carvalho
Dissertation Abstract:
This ethnographic research examines the social implications of the ethnolinguistic contact that occurs in the U.S.-Mexico border region at a day labor center in Tucson, Arizona. I discuss the multiple values of English and Spanish in this setting and how individuals interpret and negotiate these values in the construction and performance of identity. More specifically, I analyze how discourses of linguistic capital shape the organization of this community and influence the dynamics of employment negotiations. The research setting includes immigrant day laborers (primarily from Mexico and Central America), employers who contract workers, and bilingual volunteers who act as language brokers between workers and their employers; all of whom use language to interactively negotiate their social status as they construct identities vis-à-vis other members of the community. My analysis reveals a discourse that places a high level of linguistic capital on Spanish-English bilingualism in the economic market. Although I have not found evidence that this linguistic capital has a real exchange rate into dollars, my data demonstrates that immigrants rapidly acquire and contribute to this locally constructed discourse. I explore the techniques that workers use to exploit and promote their language abilities through 'performances' of bilingualism that are realized not only to secure employment, but also for social positioning within this community of practice. Language, then, is one of the many tools that both workers and employers use in the construction of interpersonal relationships and social hierarchies. In addition, I analyze gatekeeping encounters focusing on the rapid employment negotiations that occur between day laborers and their employers, building on previous research with regard to the concepts of rapport, co-membership, and the presentation of an institutional self. Finally, I propose a model for the study of intercultural communication and contact that reflects the dynamic nature of contact and the complexity of overlapping categories of identity. Identity formation is a multiplex and multidirectional social construction that necessitates pushing beyond binary models of intercultural communication. Identity construction is informed not only by face-to-face interlocutors, but also by the linguistic ecology of dominant and subordinate discourses and the imagined individual and collective interlocutors they evoke.
Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issue
|
|

Please report any bad links or misclassified data
LINGUIST Homepage | Read
LINGUIST | Contact us

While the LINGUIST List makes every effort to ensure the linguistic relevance of sites listed on its pages, it cannot vouch for their contents.
|
|