Author:
Pratt Teresa,D'Onofrio Annette
Abstract
AbstractThis article explores the intertwining semiotics of language and embodiment in performances of Californian personae. We analyze two actors’ performances of Californian characters in parodic skits, comparing them to the same actors’ performances of non-Californian characters. In portraying their Californian characters, the actors use particularized jaw settings, which we link toembodied stereotypesfrom earlier portrayals of the Valley Girl and Surfer Dude personae. Acoustic analysis demonstrates that both actors also produce features of the California Vowel Shift in their Californian performances, aligning their linguistic productions with sound changes documented in California. We argue that these embodied stereotypes and phonetic realizations not only co-occur in parodic styles, but are in fact semiotically and corporeally intertwined, one occasioning the other. Moreover, the performances participate in the broader process ofenregisterment, packaging these semiotic resources with other linguistic and extralinguistic features to recontextualize Californian personae in the present day. (Parody, performance, California, California Vowel Shift, embodiment, embodied stereotype, enregisterment)*
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,Language and Linguistics
Reference62 articles.
1. The Concept of Articulatory Settings
2. Chain Shifting and Centralization in California Vowels: An Acoustic Analysis
3. Pratt Teresa (2016). The use of embodied creak by young men at an arts high school. Paper presented at New Ways of Analyzing Variation 45, November 4–6. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
4. Semiotic Layering through Gesture and Intonation
5. THE CALIFORNIA VOWEL SHIFT AND GAY IDENTITY
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