Filtern
Dokumenttyp
Gehört zur Bibliographie
- ja (5) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- sociolinguistics (5) (entfernen)
Institut
When it comes to autobiographical narratives, the most spontaneous and natural manner is preferable. But neither individually told narratives nor those grounded in the communicative repertoire of a social group are easily comparable. A clearly identifiable tertium comparationis is mandatory. We present the results of an experimental ‘Narrative Priming’ setting with French students. A potentially underlying model of narrating from personal experience was activated via a narrative prime, and in a second step, the participants were asked to tell a narrative of their own. The analysis focuses on similarities and differences between the primes and the students’ narratives. The results give evidence for the possibility to elicit a set of comparable narratives via a prime, and to activate an underlying narrative template. Meaningful differences are discussed as generational and age related styles. The transcriptions from the participants that authorized the publication are available online.
Language and aging research
(2019)
Our introduction to the special collection gives an overview of the research projects which were originally presented at the third CLARe network conference. We group the research under four cross-sectional topics that unite the different contributions: the data used in the research, the theoretical frameworks, the languages and varieties which are represented and the situational contexts which are examined. These projects represent the current state of research in this field and allows the reader to orient themselves within this diverse field but also leaves many questions open and provides impetus for future lines of research. The interaction and collaboration between diverse disciplines is the central aspect which unites all contributions to the special collection.
Die Dissertation legt ihren Schwerpunkt auf die synchronische und diachronische Variation im Gebrauch der französischen Kausalkonjunktion parce que sowie auf die Interaktion mit den außersprachlichen Variablen Alter und sozioprofessionelle Kategorie. Basierend auf vorausgehenden makrodiachronischen Studien, die Anhaltspunkte dafür liefern, dass die Konjunktion einen Prozess der Pragmatikalisierung durchlaufen hat und weiterhin durchläuft, wurde ein Untersuchungskorpus von 56 Interviews aus den diachronisch distinkten Korpora ESLO1, ESLO2 und LangAge extrahiert. Dieses Untersuchungskorpus diente als Grundlage für Panelstudien und Trendstudien, die darauf ausgerichtet waren, die Pragmatikalisierung von parce que aus einem mikrodiachronischen Gesichtspunkt zu verifizieren. Zusätzlich zu der diachronischen Perspektive wurde eine synchronische Perspektive eingenommen, um die Variation im Gebrauch der Konjunktion so einem diachronischen Phänomen wie dem age grading oder der apparent time zuordnen zu können. Ausgehend von der Theorie der Konstruktionsgrammatik wurden parce que enthaltende Konstruktionen bottom-up annotiert und in fünf Pragmatikalitätsgrade kategorisiert (pra0–pra4). Diese wurden anschließend quantifiziert und in Abhängigkeit des Geburtsjahres und der sozioprofessionellen Kategorie der (männlichen) Sprecher mithilfe mehrerer R-Modelle wie ctrees, trees, lm, hclust und kmeans analysiert.
Die Frequenzentwicklung der Pragmatikalitätsgrade bestätigte die Pragmatikalisierungshypothese in einem mikrodiachronischen Rahmen. Zudem konnte ein quantitativer Rückgang im Gebrauch der Konstruktionen am nicht- oder weniger pragmatikalisierten (pra0, pra1) Pol festgestellt werden, während Verwendungsweisen höherer Pragmatikalisierungsgrade (pra2–pra4) über 40 Jahre vergleichsweise stabil blieben.
Obwohl für pra2 kein signifikanter Wandel hervortrat, wies dessen Entwicklung bei den Sprechern im mittleren Lebensalter sowie das synchronische Muster in Abhängigkeit von Alter (oder Geburtsjahr) und von sozioprofessioneller Kategorie dennoch in Richtung einer zugrundeliegenden diachronischen Variation. Diese könnte als ein durch die sozialen Transformationen der 1960er und 1970er Jahre katalysiertes Phänomen des age grading interpretiert werden. Für die näher am pragmatischen Pol situierten Gebrauchsweisen (pra3 und pra4) konnte keine klare Tendenz ermittelt werden.
Die Ergebnisse fordern diachronische Konzepte wie age grading und apparent time heraus, indem sie die Simplizität der zugrundeliegenden Mechanismen sowie die gängigen Methoden, diese zu identifizieren, infrage stellen.
Elicitation materials like language portraits are useful to investigate people's perceptions about the languages that they know. This study uses portraits to analyse the underlying conceptualisations people exhibit when reflecting on their language repertoires. Conceptualisations as manifestations of cultural cognition are the purview of cognitive sociolinguistics. The present study advances portrait methodology as it analyses data from structured language portraits of 105 South African youth as a linguistic corpus from both qualitative and quantitative perspectives. The approach enables the uncovering of (a) prominent underlying conceptualisations of African language(s) and the body, and (b) the differences and similarities of these conceptualisations vis-a-vis previous cognitive (socio) linguistic studies of embodied language experiences. In our analysis, African home languages emerged both as 'languages of the heart' linked to cultural identity and as 'languages of the head' linked to cognitive strength and control. Moreover, the notion of 'degrees of proficiency' or 'magnitude' of language knowledge emerged more prominently than in previous studies of embodied language experience.
In this paper, we take a cognitive-sociolinguistic perspective on texts from the colonial period. The texts stem from various agents in the colonial enterprise and include documents from missionaries, administrators and politicians, as well as legal and scientific texts. What we find and trace in these texts is a recurrent set of dominant systems of conceptualizations that are characteristic of the colonial mindset and the corresponding discourse at large. However, these conceptualizations were spelled out in quite different ways in discourse, depending on the ideological background and objectives of the authors and on the specific colonial setting they deal with. We will focus on two contexts, India and sub-Saharan Africa, and we will highlight conceptualizations related to the framing of the constellation between colonizers and colonial subjects in terms of, inter alia, a parent-child, an adult-child and a teacher-pupil relationship. We will then look into some examples of cultural practices among the colonized that were “disturbing” to the colonizers. The fact that they were betrays value systems as well as preoccupations and fears on the side of the colonizers. These practices triggered efforts at cultural engineering in the colonies which had lasting effects on the local culture in these settings. However, this impact was far from being one-directional. The experience with the “otherness” of the colonial subjects fueled debates on latent societal issues in the culture of the colonizers. We will consider this impact for the case of the discourse on homosexuality. The empire stroke back also in linguistic terms, most notably by a host of loan words that entered the lexicon of English. The way these loan words were “integrated” into the English language provides ample evidence of a cultural appropriation also in this direction, i.e., the process known as “contextualization” in traditional Kachruvian sociolinguistics is bi-directional as well.