Affiliation:
1. Puerto Rican and Latinx Studies , Brooklyn College , Brooklyn , NY , USA
Abstract
Abstract
Over three decades ago, Gloria Anzaldúa identified ideologies of linguistic standardization as an oppressive force in the Rio Grande Valley of south Texas as well as the local university. Such ideologies were used to delegitimize Chicanos via “linguistic terrorism,” or, routine forms of psychological and physical punishment meant to enforce idealized white, middle-class, monolingual social norms. However, times have changed. To account for more recent conditions, I qualify contemporary manifestations as soft linguistic terrorism, which relies more so on incentivization (reward as opposed to punishment) and ideological recruitment (enforcement based on the appearance of consent), yet continue to reproduce the near identical racializing ideologies Anzaldúa identified decades ago. Using a linguistic anthropological approach to discourse analysis, this article focuses on ethnographic interviews with students and faculty to illustrate how forms of linguistic terrorism have been rearticulated via raciolinguistic ideologies in the same region and at the same university that inspired Anzaldúa’s formulation of linguistic terrorism in the 1980s.
Reference75 articles.
1. Achugar, Mariana & Silvia Pessoa. 2009. Power and place: Language attitudes towards Spanish in a bilingual academic community in Southwest Texas. Spanish in Context 6(2). 199–223. https://doi.org/10.1075/sic.6.2.03ach.
2. Agha, Asif. 2007. Language and social relations. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
3. Alim, H. Samy. 2004. Hearing what’s not said and missing what is: Black language in white public space. In Scott F. Kiesling & Christina Bratt Paulston (eds.), Intercultural discourse and communication: The essential readings, 180–197. Malden: Blackwell.
4. Alim, Samy H. & Geneva Smitherman. 2012. Articulate while Black: Barack Obama, language, and race in the U.S. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press.
5. Alvarez, Stephanie M. 2013. Evaluating the role of the Spanish department in the education of U.S. Latin@ students: Un testimonio. Journal of Latinos and Education 12(2). 131–151. https://doi.org/10.1080/15348431.2012.745405.
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献