Abstract
AbstractUsing readers’ comments on an online news forum (The Post newspaper), this paper describes patterns of belonging to the historical (colonial) linguistic in-group anglophone and out-group francophone in Cameroon. These groups emerged from the British-French colonisation of the country after WW1, with anglophones representing the former British colony and francophones the French. My focus is on the use of eight plural pronouns and how they index in-group or out-group belonging. Four of the pronouns, we, our, us and ourselves are used inclusively to create a solid anglophone in-group through the narration of a common (colonial) history, linguistic background (the use of English) and experiences. The other four, they, them, their and themselves refer predominantly to francophones as an out-group that must be differentiated from the close-knit anglophone in-group. I illustrate how, in defending the boundaries of these groups, the commentators autobiographically narrate the life trajectories of their in-group, highlight its values and interrogate the moral stance of the out-group. They benefit from the digital space which provides anonymity and closes the geographical distances between them. Overall, the anglophone in-group narrative emerges as an autobiographical narrative within the bigger (national) autobiographical narrative of the country, into which it often opens and is sometimes integrated.
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference8 articles.
1. The new nomads In ed Letters of Transit : Reflections on Exile Identity and Loss New York : The New Press;Hoffman;Language,1999
2. Georg Transcendence of ethnic boundaries : The case of the anglophones in Cameroon of;Wolf;Journal Sociolinguistics,1997
3. The rush for English education in urban Cameroon : Sociolinguistic implications and prospects;Fonyuy;English Today,2010
4. Helen de Hoop Introduction : The flexibility of pronoun reference in context of;Hogeweg;Journal Pragmatics
5. Autobiographic narratives as data in applied linguistics Writing outside the Nation Princeton : Princeton University Press;Pavlenko;Applied Linguistics,2007
Cited by
2 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