Indexing political identity in the Catalonian procés: A sociophonetic approach
Ver/ Abrir
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemcomunitat-uji-handle:10234/9
comunitat-uji-handle2:10234/8016
comunitat-uji-handle3:10234/8623
comunitat-uji-handle4:
INVESTIGACIONMetadatos
Título
Indexing political identity in the Catalonian procés: A sociophonetic approachAutoría
Fecha de publicación
2020Editor
Cambridge University PressISSN
0047-4045; 1469-8013Cita bibliográfica
BLAS-ARROYO, José Luis. Indexing political identity in the Catalonian procés: A sociophonetic approach. Language in Society, p. 1-30.Tipo de documento
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleVersión de la editorial
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/language-in-society/article/indexing-pol ...Versión
info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersionResumen
This article demonstrates the potential for phonological variables to be a
resource for the expression of ideology and identity in historical circumstances such as those experienced recently in the Catalonian procés. ... [+]
This article demonstrates the potential for phonological variables to be a
resource for the expression of ideology and identity in historical circumstances such as those experienced recently in the Catalonian procés. Based on a
corpus consisting of communicative events from sixteen leading Catalan
politicians, four Spanish linguistic variants are analyzed. Apart from a
handful of structural predictors, the mixed-effects logistic regression analysis
shows the robustness of (only) two extralinguistic factor groups: the social
origin and the identification of the politicians as Catalan nationalist
(mainly pro-independence) or not nationalist. As regards the latter, the
most significant of all predictors, the analysis shows how nationalist
politicians always favor the sounds mainly associated with vernacular
pronunciation in eastern Catalan speech communities ([-ɫ] and [-t]), but at
the same time also favor other sounds associated with more canonical and
pan-Hispanic prestige variants ([-ð] and [-ð-]). These apparently contradictory results can be explained if the social meaning of all variants is considered
around the same indexical field, that of authenticity. In this sense, nationalists
seem to ‘appropriate’ the Spanish language by tingeing its expressive habits
with uses closer to their language. (Phonological variation, nationalism,
ideology, languages in contact, Spanish, Catalan)* [-]
Publicado en
Language in Society, 2020, p. 1-30.Proyecto de investigación
FFI2017-86194-P, UJI-B2017-01Derechos de acceso
© The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press 0047-4045/20. Licencia CC-BY-NC-ND.
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Aparece en las colecciones
- FIL_Articles [318]
El ítem tiene asociados los siguientes ficheros de licencia: