Coherence

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Coherence

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'fat talk' Girls are socialized in their groups from a young age to engage in 'fat talk' 'I'm so fat.' 'No you're not.' Peer socialization ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Coherence


1
Coherence
2
Example of Collusion
  • Hi, this is Prof. Dickinson in Anthropology.
  • Oh, hi this is Laurie
  • Laurie, yeah
  • Orders video
  • -Would you like anything else with that?
  • -Uh maybe a large fries?
  • -laughs Yeah I realized that sounded kind of
    strange.

3
Variation
  • In U.S.
  • We answer the phone Hello?
  • Preference is for speaker recognition, Hi, its
    me.
  • In Netherlands
  • Answer the phone with Hello first name
  • Preference is for speaker self-identification

4
Repair
  • Macaulay p. 115
  • Self-repair fixing what youve said
  • Other-repair fixing what someone else has said
  • fill-ins contributing a word when a speaker
    hesitates

5
Coherence
  • Macaulay points out use of Well (pg. 116)
  • Used to link ideas together when their connection
    is not immediately clear, or to signal moving on
    to the next part of a narrative.
  • What did you do after the war?
  • Well, I was married by that time.

6
Coherence in narratives
  • Children must learn how to tell stories
    coherently
  • Young children often dont give enough coherence
    signals, making their narratives seem disjointed
  • Coherence signals in English include Then,
    So, Thats why, Because

7
Narrative order
  • In American storytelling, we usually identify a
    beginning, then move forward chronologically.
  • Other storytelling traditions may not put the
    same priority on chronology

8
Cultural frames
  • Agar says that culture provides frames of
    reference that make sense out of cultural
    knowledge and behaviors. (pp. 136-139)
  • Frames place limits on how far culture can be
    bent before you are not acting within the bounds
    of that culture.

9
What do you need to know about language to get
this joke?
  • Why do women live longer than men?
  • Men get tired of the complaining and give
    up.

10
How do frames work?
  • a frame is a culturally understood speech
    situation that is defined by certain features.
  • Example A lecture frame is defined by the
    orientation of the participants to each other,
    and by the turn-taking and turn-allocation
    patterns

11
Opening and Closing Frames
  • opening Okay everyone, lets get started
  • closing Alright, thats it for today.
  • opening The weirdest thing happened to me
    today
  • closing I mean, isnt that crazy?

12
Example Rap battles
  • MC says Kick that shit
  • Super MC in the house!
  • Yo, yo
  • Rap

13
Breaking a frame
  • Frames can be broken if you step out of what
    you are doing
  • For example, youre reading Hamlets soliloquy
    and you stop and say Wait, how do you pronounce
    that?

14
What do frames do for us?
  • Frames help us click into the right set of
    responses for the type of interaction were
    having.
  • We might know more about what register to use,
    rules about eye contact and touching, etc.

15
Competence
  • Noam Chomsky wanted to define linguistic
    competence as having the knowledge of a native
    speaker. You are a competent speaker without
    learning anything in school or from books. His
    idea of competence focused ONLY on grammar.
  • This is a classic inside the circle approach

16
Communicative Competence
  • Dell Hymes, a linguistic anthropologist working
    with Native American peoples (Chinook speakers),
    felt that we need to know a lot more than grammar
    to be competent, socially able speakers of a
    language.
  • He called the social knowledge you need to have
    to communicate like a member of a community
    communicative competence.

17
Acquiring competence
  • As we learn language, we learn socially important
    rules for how to speak.
  • Some rules might be explicitly taught to
    children, like You call him Uncle, not Mister.
    or What do you say to the nice lady?

18
Language socialization
  • As children learn appropriate ways of speaking,
    they also learn important cultural values and
    ideals of personhood. They learn to act like
    someone of their social position, gender, ethnic
    group, etc.

19
Lifelong Socialization
  • As we move into new social contexts, we learn new
    ways of speaking and relating to people we may
    learn new frames
  • Enter college, joining a frat, or moving into a
    new job are all language socialization situations

20
Peer socialization
  • Socialization by members of your own group (your
    peers) is one of the primary ways that children
    over the age of 5 and adults are socialized
    through language

21
Cameron article
  • Study of a conversation among five while.
    middle-class 21 year olds
  • Cameron focuses on how much these men talk about
    other men and other mens gayness as a way of
    defining their own masculinity

22
  • pg. 281 In these speakers understanding of
    gender, gay men, like women, provide a contrast
    group against whom masculinity can be defined.
    This principle of contrast seems to set limits on
    the permissibility of gossip for these men.

23
More socialization
  • fat talk
  • Girls are socialized in their groups from a young
    age to engage in fat talk
  • Im so fat.
  • No youre not.

24
Peer socialization
  • When children go to school, peers become the main
    vehicle for their socialization into particular
    roles (e.g. developing ideas of being a good
    friend)
  • Child peer groups often span several years at a
    time (through siblings, neighborhood friends,
    etc.) allowing for games and verbal art to be
    passed down from generation to generation.

25
Acquisition and Socialization
  • Language acquisition refers to the process of a
    child/baby acquiring language for the first time
  • Language socialization refers to the process by
    which a child gains communicative competence and
    is socialized into a group through language

26
  • Children are socialized INTO a linguistic and
    cultural system, but children are also socialized
    THROUGH language into social roles and models of
    behavior

27
  • Language acquisition is sometimes treated by
    child development researchers as a mechanical
    process of activating an innate capacity that is
    minimally accessible to cultural influence.
  • BUT culture surrounds child language learning,
    including the significance of learning language,
    rules for appropriate use, and so forth.

28
What are kids really learning?
  • Example Ochs research on dinner-table
    conversation in California
  • Conversation focuses on childrens activities
  • Mom does all the conversational work to guide the
    story
  • Everyone turns to Dad for a moral judgment at the
    end.

29
Becoming Human
  • What is the first question we ask about a
    newborn? Are babies human?
  • Ochs and Schieffelin compare 3 cultures with
    regard to ideas about babies and language
    development (US middle class, Samoa, Kaluli)

30
U.S. White Middle Class
  • Infants are treated as a social being.
  • Child is directly addressed. Caregivers may
    answer for the child.
  • Adults accommodate to children. (e.g. baby talk,
    baby-proofing)

31
Kaluli
  • Babies are soft and have no understanding
  • Caregivers speak for babies dont modify
    speech much to accommodate
  • Child does not begin to harden until it says
    mother (naw) and breast (bo)

32
Samoan
  • As small infants, babies are talked about, but
    not to until they begin to crawl.
  • Toddlers are called willful and need to be
    disciplined/ordered what to do. Given commands,
    but not expected to talk back
  • First word is widely reported as tae (shit)
    considered assertive
  • Social stratification incorporated into language
    learning a young child asks mother for
    something, mother will say something to older
    sibling. Older sibling will address baby
    learning order

33
  • Many rules for interaction are not explicitly
    taught. Children learn them through experience.
  • Eye contact
  • Interruption patterns
  • How to get a turn speaking
  • When to stop speaking
  • What topics are discussed and what arent
    discussed, and with whom

34
Politeness and collusion
  • See MacCaulay Chapter 10 (53-57)
  • In order to make many situations go forward, you
    must be polite.
  • BUT being polite often involves placing yourself
    in a certain role in the hierarchy.

35
Positive vs. Negative Politeness
  • Positive politeness oriented towards a persons
    desire to be well regarded
  • Negative politeness oriented towards a persons
    desire not be imposed upon.

36
Positive Politeness examples
  • You look nice today!
  • Its always such a pleasure to see you.
  • What an honor to finally meet you.
  • More examples?

37
Positive Politeness and collusion
  • By accepting positive politeness, you are
    colluding in the idea of what constitutes a
    compliment (in other words, what it means in your
    culture to be well regarded.
  • Example A Korean woman told an American
    acquaintance I havent seen you in so long! You
    look fat! and was slapped in the face.
    collusion broke down

38
Negative Politeness examples
  • I know youre really busy, but could you take a
    look at this?
  • Could you do me a big favor?
  • Someone needs to organize this project and
    produce the pamphlet.
  • More examples?

39
Negative Politeness and Collusion
  • Many examples of negative politeness include
    being indirect, and also accepting that there is
    some exaggeration going on, and also recognizing
    whether you are in a position to turn down a
    request.
  • Can I ask you for a big favor?
  • Yes, of course. Anything to help out.
  • I know youre really busy, but can I ask you for
    a favor?
  • Sorry, I really am too busy.
  • Oh, uh. Well, I really need you to do it, since
    Bob is swamped with the Anderson account.
  • Oh, okay.

40
Film World of Differences
  • How can cultural differences cause
    miscommunication at different levels of language
    (vocabulary, gesture, physical space etc.)?
  • If people come from different cultural
    backgrounds, how can they develop collusion over
    time, or within a single conversation?
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