theorists for paper 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Lakoff

A

supported Jespersen’s deficit model of 1922. argued that male language was the norm and females language was deficient.
conventions of male and female language
released a book in 1975 “language and woman’s place”

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2
Q

O’Barr and Atkins

A

concluded that the language conventions that lakoff said women used were also used by men who had little power/confidence. language diversity is due to power not gender. in the stereotypical past women have had less power which may be the cause of their language. in a more equal society, maybe these differences will be less present.

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3
Q

Tannen

A
1990 book "you just don't understand"
difference model 
status vs support
independence vs intimacy 
advice vs understanding 
information vs feelings 
orders vs proposals 
conflict vs compromise
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4
Q

cheshire

A

non standard form 1982
concluded that boys use non standard forms to conform to/are controlled by vernacular culture
In 1987, Cheshire observed that language, as much as with teenagers as with adults, develops in response to “important life events that affect social relations and social attitudes of individuals.”

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5
Q

coates

A

1989

argued that kids will be apart of same sex friendship groups and femlale language is cooperative

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6
Q

janet hyde

A

2005
gender similarities hypothesis
more similarities between men and women than differances

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7
Q

milroy

A

belfast study 1980
men more closed networks
women more open networks
investigated 3 working class communities

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8
Q

pilkington

A

1992- Women in same sex conversations were more positive and collaborative. Men in same sex talk were a lot less collaborative

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9
Q

waering

A

1999 – Power types. Influential, power that’s used to influence and people listen because they want to. Instrumental, power used to establish power and must listen. Personal power – links to occupational roles. Political power – position to enforce law. Social group power – links to social roles (age, power sex

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10
Q

drew and herritage

A

Inferential framework – knowledge is built up over time and used to understand meanings that is implicit (linking to jargon). Believed there were 6 predominant features of workplace speech; goal orientation, turn taking rules, allowing contributions, professional lexis, structure, and symmetry.

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11
Q

herrgard

A

jargon is important as it increases efficiency in the workplace

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12
Q

swales

A

2011 – discourse communities. People use lexis specific to occupation to share and achieve the same goals. One must possess the required level of knowledge to join the community.

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13
Q

crystal

A

speech acts
Verdictives, which present a finding
Exercitives, which exemplify power or influence (includes giving permission or orders)
Commissives, which consist of promising or committing to doing something
Behabitives, which have to do with social behaviors and attitudes like apologizing and congratulating
Expositives, which explain how our language interacts with itself

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14
Q

kohn

A

language choice is in response to life events

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15
Q

grice

A
maxims
quality 
quantity 
manner
relevance
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16
Q

coupland

A

convergence study in a travel agency
woman converged to customers
aitch dropping “we’d ave to get”
intervocalic “em”

17
Q

malz/borker

A

men are more agressive in speech

18
Q

labov

A

martha’s vineyard
fisherman
tourists
locals
tourists converged to the fisherman in order to seem differant form the tourists
investigated the /au/ and /ai/ vowel sounds, in words such as mouse and mice

19
Q

eckert

A

chronological age: number of years since birth
biological age: maturity
social age: age based upon life experiences

20
Q

kerswill

A

social mobility leads to increased dialect levelling

21
Q

choy and Dodd

A

teachers make judgements on students based on how they speak

22
Q

giles capital punishment experiment

A

same script in different accents
regional accents were more persuasive
rp seen as more impressive
people not impressed with urban accents

23
Q

dixon and mahoney

A

‘matched guise’ approach in order to see if there was a correlation between accent and how we percieve someone’s guilt
non-standard Birmingham speakers are more likely to be considered guilty than more standard Birmingham speakers

24
Q

Seligam, Tucker and Lambert

A

teacher’s perceptions of students are heavily influenced by their speech

25
Q

aitchinson

A

crumbling castle, infectious disease, damp spoon syndrome

26
Q

bernstein

A
elaborated code - upper class
restricted code - working class
middle class - both
27
Q

spapir whorf hypothesis

A

the way we use language influences our world view or perception e.g. if youre brought up to use language that is pejorative to a particular social group. you will likely develop a pejorative view towards this group

28
Q

koester

A

phatic communication “how was your weekend?”
“nice weather today isn’t it” “how you doing?” important in the workplace as it builds relationships and these are important in the workplace

29
Q

zimmerman

A

teens influenced by the media

30
Q

de klerk

A

teens use language to create new identities and defy the norm

31
Q

brown levinson

A

the language we use at work is determined by our heirachy