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2 - Situating Discourse Analysis in Ethnographic and Sociopolitical Context

from Part I - (Con)Textualizing Discourses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 September 2020

Anna De Fina
Affiliation:
Georgetown University, Washington DC
Alexandra Georgakopoulou
Affiliation:
King's College London
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Summary

In this chapter, I offer examples of ethnographic approaches to discourse, focusing in particular on how linguistic anthropologists have engaged with and expanded upon the concepts and theoretical tools offered by Goffman and Bakhtin. This includes attention to how Goffman unpacks interactional participant roles, how his concept of footing has been critical to recent interest in stance, and also how speakers linguistically shift in and out of registers. Drawing on Bakhtin, discourse analysts have turned to explore the productive concepts of genre, intertextuality, voicing and chronotopes. Ethnographic discourse analysis connects levels of discourse and context and relies on specific methodological strategies to capture the dynamic ethnographic and sociopolitical contexts within which language is located and to which it contributes and responds.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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References

Further Reading

Hilary Parsons Dick shows how speakers evoke chronotopic distinctions between tradition (“here”) and progress (“there”) to situate themselves in relation to the ever-present reality of transnational migration.

This is a multi-sited exploration of face-to-face and online discourse surrounding African American women’s hair care that attends to how women negotiate identity, professional expertise and US race relations.

The authors illustrate how speakers invoke and then contrast “racist” and “anti-racist” voices in their daily speech in order to display their own racial consciousness.

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Roth-Gordon, J. and da Silva, A. J. (2013). Double-Voicing in the Everyday Language of Brazilian Black Activism. In Bischoff, S. T., Cole, D., Fountain, A. V. and Miyashita, M. (eds.) The Persistence of Language: Constructing and Confronting the Past and Present in the Voices of Jane H. Hill. Philadelphia, PA: John Benjamins. 365–88.Google Scholar

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