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Frost, Alanna – College Composition and Communication, 2011
This essay suggests a companion term to "literacy sponsors" that better mirrors the practice and protection of traditional literacies evident in the cases of two Dakelh elders. "Literacy steward" introduces a theoretical means to describe community members whose rhetorical decisions depend on traditions that are alternative to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Ethnography, Females
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Baker, Ronald L. – Contemporary Education, 1988
The study of folk speech, which traditionally included only regional dialects, has evolved to include cultural and generational dialects. This article discusses how folk speech study has come to include a range of dialects and a variety of sociolinguistic trends. (JL)
Descriptors: Dialects, Ethnography, Folk Culture, Language Classification
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Sarroub, Loukia K. – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2002
Discusses how individuals and communities in the United States re-present themselves in the context of the terrorist attack of September 11 and its complex aftermath, exploring the "American" discourse on inclusion and discrimination by examining the neologisms and social practices that were amplified by the attack in local and national…
Descriptors: Arabs, Cultural Context, Ethnography, Immigrants
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Huspek, Michael R. – Language in Society, 1986
Suggests an alternative approach to the variable rule method of accounting for linguistic variability. This alternative approach, which is sensitive to social context and the relevance of meaning, is used to support an analysis of "-ing/in'" variability in some North American industrial workers' speech. (SED)
Descriptors: Audiotape Recordings, Dialect Studies, Discourse Analysis, Ethnography
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Yu, Ming-chung – Language and Speech, 2005
The present study examines sociolinguistic features of a particular speech act, paying compliments, by comparing and contrasting native Chinese and native American speakers' performances. By focusing on a relatively understudied speaker group such as the Chinese, typically regarded as having rules of speaking and social norms very different from…
Descriptors: Speech Acts, Sociolinguistics, Chinese, Foreign Countries