Language and identity: past concerns, future directions

Author:

McEntee-Atalianis Lisa1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Birkbeck, University of London 26, Russell Square London Great Britain

Abstract

Abstract “Identity” as an operating variable and/or explanatory concept continues to pervade sociolinguistic scholarship. This article reflects on and discusses the continuing dominance of post-structural and social constructionist accounts of identity and debates whether recent work has led to an “unrestrained embracing of speaker agency” (Bell 2017: 592) with a comparative neglect of social structure, or whether this work is contributing to a more nuanced understanding of the relationship between local meaning-making practices and macro-socio(linguistic) processes, and thereby challenging extant binaries in sociolinguistics, in particular: the treatment of stability versus fluidity, agency versus structure and the traditional dichotomy between micro- and macro-sociolinguistics. Reflecting on historical developments and recent trends, it outlines the significant contribution of theoretical models and empirical studies to sociolinguistics, whilst noting obvious gaps, e.g. insufficient studies of the Global South. It is argued that recent work is contributing to a sociolinguistics which foregrounds and problematises the concept of “context” and the contingency of difference and belonging. The paper also argues that recent identity scholarship opens up opportunities for cross-disciplinary projects, drawing on the combined expertise of sociolinguistics, cognitive sociologists and psycholinguists to explain inter alia such phenomena as fluidity and variation in speaker/community attitudes and practices.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Medicine

Reference49 articles.

1. Alcoff, Linda, M. 2010. New epistomologies: Post-positivist accounts of identity. In Margaret Wetherell and Chandra T. Moharty (eds.), The Sage handbook of identities, 114–162. London: Sage Publications.

2. Bell, Allan. 2017. Giving voice: A personal essay on the shape of sociolinguistics. Journal of Sociolinguistics 21(5). 587–602.

3. Benwell, Bethan & Elizabeth Stokoe. 2006. Discourse and identity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

4. Benwell, Bethan & Elizabeth Stokoe. 2010. Analysing identity in interaction: Contrasting discourse, genealogical, narrative and conversation analysis. In Margaret Wetherell & Chandra T. Mohanty (eds.), The Sage handbook of identities, 82–103. London: Sage Publications.

5. Blackwood, Robert, Elizabeth Lanza & Hirut Woldemariam. 2017. Negotiating and contesting identities in linguistic landscapes. London: Bloomsbury Academic.

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