Linguistics ETDs

Author

Dean Hayes

Publication Date

5-1-2013

Abstract

This study investigates how the perception of Southern American English is linked to specific linguistic features, both phonetic and grammatical, in addition to how these features are interpreted differently by two different groups, one Southern and one non-Southern. Using interview-based methodology, I produce a holistic conceptual representation of the identity invoked for each constellation of features for each group and provide a unified framework for features and corresponding associations that previous works have discussed individually. Finally, I analyze imitations offered in interviews, by which means I am able to glean more detailed information from participants than they would otherwise be able to convey without technical terminology. The Southern group distinguished two classes of linguistic features, which I term phonetic and grammatical features. This distinction allowed two separate constellations of associations with Southern American English, one generally positive and one generally negative. The grammatical features were considered bad English and associated with a lack of education, while the phonetic features, such as the Southern Vowel Shift, deletion of /t/, and realization of (ING) as [-ɪn], were regarded as merely an accent and interpreted as laid-back. In addition, Southern American English was associated with politeness and humility. For some features, especially t/d-deletion and alveolar (ING), the perception as positive or negative varied dramatically with the context. The non-Southern group, on the other hand, interpreted every aspect of Southern American English as negative, from grammar to phonetics. Notably, the Southern Vowel Shift, perceived as abnormally slowed speech, was thought to correlate to slower cognitive processing, and grammatical features were interpreted as demonstrating lack of education or even stupidity. Concomitant associations included religiosity, xenophobia and racism, and jingoism.

Language

English

Keywords

Language ideologies, Sociolinguistics, Language and identity, Southern American English

Document Type

Thesis

Degree Name

Linguistics

Level of Degree

Masters

Department Name

Department of Linguistics

First Committee Member (Chair)

Koops, Christian

Second Committee Member

Jacobson, Holly

Third Committee Member

Debenport, Erin

Comments

Submitted by Dean Hayes (hayesdo0@unm.edu) on 2013-04-12T22:23:50Z No. of bitstreams: 1 formatthesis.pdf: 2771821 bytes, checksum: bebad19e0b536726620c7569a9c6fa86 (MD5), Approved for entry into archive by Doug Weintraub (dwein@unm.edu) on 2013-07-11T04:08:48Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 formatthesis.pdf: 2771821 bytes, checksum: bebad19e0b536726620c7569a9c6fa86 (MD5), Made available in DSpace on 2013-07-11T04:08:48Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 formatthesis.pdf: 2771821 bytes, checksum: bebad19e0b536726620c7569a9c6fa86 (MD5)

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