A new companion to linguistic anthropology / edited by Alessandro Duranti, Rachel George, and Robin Conley Riner.
Contributor(s): Duranti, Alessandro [editor.] | George, Rachel [editor.] | Conley Riner, Robin [editor.]
Language: English Series: Wiley Blackwell companions to anthropology: 34.Publisher: Hoboken, NJ : John Wiley & Sons Inc., 2023Copyright date: ©2023Description: 1 online resource (xvi, 622 pages) : illustrations (chiefly color), mapsContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781119780830; 1119780837; 9781119780823; 1119780829; 9781119780816; 1119780810Subject(s): Anthropological linguisticsGenre/Form: Electronic books.DDC classification: 306.44 LOC classification: P35 | .N49 2023Online resources: Full text is available at Wiley Online Library Click here to viewItem type | Current location | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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COLLEGE LIBRARY | COLLEGE LIBRARY | 306.44 N42011 2023 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
Table of Contents
Notes on Contributors viii
Acknowledgments xvii
Introduction 1
Robin Conley Riner and Rachel George
Part I: Speech Communities and Their Contested Boundaries 13
1 On the Social Lives of Indigenous North American Languages 15
Paul V. Kroskrity and Barbra A. Meek
2 Creolization: Its Context, Power, and Meaning 33
Christine Jourdan
3 Language Endangerment and Renewal 49
Sean O’Neill
4 Narrating Transborder Communities 66
Elizabeth Falconi
5 Mixing, Switching, and Languaging in Interaction 86
Jan David Hauck and Teruko Vida Mitsuhara
6 Postcolonial Semiotics 107
Angela Reyes
7 Deaf Communities: Constellations, Entanglements, and Defying Classifications 122
Erin Moriarty and Lynn Hou
8 Global Hip Hop: Style, Language, and Globalization 139
H. Samy Alim
Part II: Literacies and Textualities Across Time and Space 157
9 Ancient Literacy Practices and Script Communities 159
Alice Mandell
10 Rethinking Translation and Transduction 178
Susan Gal
11 Social Dramas: A Semiotic Approach 194
Kristina Wirtz
12 Digital Literacies 214
Rachel Flamenbaum and Rachel George
13 Digital Religious Discourse 235
Ayala Fader
14 Linguistic Anthropology of the Visual 253
Jennifer F. Reynolds
15 Technobodily Literacy in Video Interaction 273
Samira Ibnelkaïd
16 Ethics and Language 299
Steven P. Black
Part III: Speaking, Sensing, and Sounding 315
17 Contested Intentions 317
Alessandro Duranti
18 Entanglements of Language and Experience in Everyday Life 334
Elinor Ochs
19 Affect, Emotion, and Linguistic Shift 354
Kathryn E. Graber
20 Using the Senses in Animal Communication 369
Erica A. Cartmill
21 Human Touch 391
Asta Cekaite and Marjorie Harness Goodwin
22 Socialization of Attention 410
Lourdes de León
23 Sound, Voice, and the Felt Body 428
Patrick Eisenlohr
24 Multimodality 443
Keith M. Murphy
25 Language and Food 461
Jillian R. Cavanaugh and Kathleen C. Riley
Part IV: Language, Power, and Justice 477
26 Language Policy and Ethnic Conflict 479
Christina P. Davis
27 Secrecy 494
Erin Debenport
28 Legal Language and Its Ideologies 509
Robin Conley Riner
29 Language, Gender, Race, and Sexuality: Intersectional Perspectives 525
Lal Zimman
30 Engaged Linguistic Anthropology 542
Netta Avineri and Jocelyn Ahlers
31 Language and Racism 560
Krystal A. Smalls and Jenny L. Davis
32 Communicative Justice and Health 577
Charles L. Briggs
33 The Force of Indexicality 596
Alessandro Duranti
Index 614
"The original Companion to Linguistic Anthropology was published in 2004. The New Companion, whose all-new chapters aim to capture the state of the discipline in the first two decades of the twenty-first century, illustrates the many exciting new directions in linguistic anthropology as well as the persistence, elaboration, and transformation of some of the foundational concepts discussed in the 2004 volume. The major sections in the new volume showcase how the subfield has reworked classic linguistic anthropological concepts and methods and developed new ones in response to political, social, and technological developments over the last several decades, including 1) renewing commitments to engaged linguistic anthropology in a time of ongoing political and environmental crises 2) continuing to both critique and assert the relevance of community and its multiple variants as a unit of analysis 3) tracing the temporal and spatial contours of interaction in a globalized, mediatized world and 4) emphasizing the role of the senses and experience in language. In the introduction, we explore each of these developments in turn, revealing ways they influence each other and how they have shaped thematic developments in the field, including the rise to prominence of topics such as chronotope and scale, materiality, language and experience, decolonization, and posthumanism. The discussion focuses on the ways in which: 1. linguistic anthropologists have recommitted themselves to social justice issues and responded directly to political and historical events and crises of the first two decades of the 21st century 2. the resulting new thematic directions in linguistic anthropology have both transformed and reaffirmed the field's classic topics of study, methods, and theoretical underpinnings 3. such developments enable new forms of interdisciplinarity both within and beyond anthropology and allow us to (re)consider both the place of language and the taken-for-granted centrality of humans in our research"-- Provided by publisher.
About the Author
ALESSANDRO DURANTI is Distinguished Research Professor of Anthropology at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA). One of the most respected linguistic anthropologists in the world, Duranti has authored and edited many of the defining volumes in the field. He is the co-founder of the journal Pragmatics, former editor of the Journal of Linguistic Anthropology, and past President of the Society of Linguistic Anthropology.
RACHEL GEORGE is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Whitman College. Her research interests include language socialization after regime change, ambivalent discourse, language and bureaucracy, and the semiotics of writing on social media. Her work on changing linguistic, political, and ethnic identities in Belgrade, Serbia has been published in Language in Society and Political and Legal Anthropology Review.
ROBIN CONLEY RINER is Professor of Anthropology at Marshall University. Her work in linguistic and legal anthropology investigates how people use language to navigate morally complex experiences surrounding institutional death and killing. She is the author of Confronting the Death Penalty and co-editor of Language and Social Justice in Practice.
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