dc.contributor.author | Forsberg, Julia | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2018-10-25T09:24:19Z | |
dc.date.available | 2018-10-25T09:24:19Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2018-10-25 | |
dc.identifier.isbn | 978-91-7833-199-4 | |
dc.identifier.isbn | 978-91-7833-200-7 | |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/2077/57788 | |
dc.description.abstract | Speakers of a language carry with them a set of language ideologies, i.e. beliefs about
norms and rules in relation to that language. One such ideology is a standard language
ideology, which is generally associated with prescriptive beliefs connected to linguistic
standardness and correctness. A speaker’s understanding of language ideologies can affect
their speech style. The speech style of a given speaker at a given time is further affected by
a number of factors surrounding the setting of the speech situation in question, including
the topic of conversation, the physical surroundings and the audience (known as audience
design). Those audience members who are not present in a given speech situation are
known as referees.
In this compilation thesis, urban adolescent language in Sweden is studied from a
number of angles, with the overarching assumption that speech style is designed with a
specific audience in mind, and within the frame of those language ideologies available to
the speaker.
The data used in the studies included is mostly interactional, taken from a corpus of
111 adolescents in Stockholm and Gothenburg, interacting in interviews with a researcher,
and in map-tasks with a self-selected peer. Further data has been collected through online
questionnaires, one targeting 80 teachers of English as a foreign language, and one
perception experiment asking 180 listeners to consider the pragmatic functions and the
language spoken in utterances of the word OK.
The first study examines how the map-task can be used as a tool for sociolinguistic
data collection, analysing the resulting interactions using audience design, and interviewing
participants as to their experiences. The second study considers the language ideologies of
teachers through questions concerning their own and their pupils’ use of varieties of
English, and their views on the same. The third study uses self-assessments of language
proficiencies in order to get at adolescents’ standard language ideologies, and their use of
referees as audience when considering their own proficiencies. The fourth and fifth studies
use specific utterances of the word OK from the map-task recordings in order to examine
connections between pragmatic and phonetic (segmental and prosodic) information in
utterance in-and-out-of-context to language spoken and speaker role.
Together, these studies explore ways in which audience design and language
ideology interact and are manifested in different aspects of language. | sv |
dc.language.iso | eng | sv |
dc.relation.haspart | paper 4: https://doi.org/10.21437/SpeechProsody.2018-11 | sv |
dc.subject | Linguistics | sv |
dc.subject | Adolescent speech | sv |
dc.subject | English in Sweden | sv |
dc.subject | Referee design | sv |
dc.subject | Audience design | sv |
dc.subject | Map-task | sv |
dc.title | Audience design in interaction: studies on urban adolescent spoken languages | sv |
dc.type | Text | |
dc.type.svep | Doctoral thesis | eng |
dc.type.degree | Doctor of Philosophy | sv |
dc.gup.origin | Göteborgs universitet. Humanistiska fakulteten | swe |
dc.gup.origin | University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Arts | eng |
dc.gup.department | Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Theory of Science ; Institutionen för filosofi, lingvistik och vetenskapsteori | sv |
dc.gup.defenceplace | Fredagen den 16 november 2018, kl.13.15, sal T307, Olof Wijksgatan 6 | sv |
dc.gup.defencedate | 2018-11-16 | |
dc.gup.dissdb-fakultet | HF | |