* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
LINGUIST List logo Eastern Michigan University Wayne State University *
* People & Organizations * Jobs * Calls & Conferences * Publications * Language Resources * Text & Computer Tools * Teaching & Learning * Mailing Lists * Search *
* *
 
E-mail this message to a friend
Title: Language Exchanges: The value of Spanish in Los Angeles
Author: A. Vermy
Email: click here to access email
Degree Awarded: University of California, Los Angeles , Department of Romance Linguistics and Literature
Degree Date: 2008
Linguistic Subfield(s): Sociolinguistics
Anthropological Linguistics
Subject Language(s): English
Spanish
Director(s): Claudia Parodi-Lewin
John Dagenais
Edward Tuttle
Antonio Quicoli

Abstract:

Drawing upon theoretical ideas from sociology, linguistic anthropology and
social psychology, and placing them within the debate of language
selection, this study investigates the attitudes of native Spanish speakers
towards non-native Spanish speakers in Los Angeles, California to
demonstrate how the value of Spanish influences the linguistic exchanges
between native and non-native speakers. I interviewed 50 bilingual females
of Mexican origin in order to address their Spanish and English language
use, the beliefs they have towards their dialect, and what they think of
non-native Spanish speakers (including their opinion of the non-natives'
language variety and accents). I demonstrate how the participants'
educational level and their language maintenance influence their opinions
towards the non-native Spanish speakers. I also establish how native
language perception impacts accent fondness. This elucidates how the
attitudes one has towards language assigns it a certain value and how these
attitudes determine the market value of Spanish in the linguistic market.

Following Bourdieu, I posit that if the native Spanish speakers correlate
the non-native Spanish speaker's dialect with a variety of Spanish they do
not possess (the standard variety of Spanish) it affects how they respond
to the non-native. I show if the native Spanish speakers perceive the
non-native Spanish speaker's mother tongue to be English, and if said
native Spanish speakers esteem English more highly than they regard
Spanish, this determines the language they choose to speak with the
non-native speaker. I confirm how so-called stereotypes influence the way
individuals interact with one another since accent perception is part of
the processes that shape how native speakers interact with non-native
speakers. I explain how language attitudes show that the language exchanges
between native and non-native are necessarily associations of symbolic power.

I use as a point of departure Bourdieu's notions of habitus and symbolic
and cultural capital together with iconicity, power and languages games and
relate them all to the concepts of language identity/loyalty to establish
how they affect the language maintenance of native speakers and their
perception of non-native speech. This is a conglomerate of measurable
factors that influence the value of Spanish in Los Angeles.
Add a dissertation
Update dissertation
Page Updated: 25-Nov-2009

Please report any bad links or misclassified data

LINGUIST Homepage | Read LINGUIST | Contact us

NSF Logo

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