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Title: | Folklore and Sociolinguistics |
Other Titles: | Verbal art and speech play; ethnopoetics; ethnography of speaking; performance; speech act theory; semiotics; oral-formulaic theory |
Authors: | John Holmes, McDowell |
Keywords: | General Works History of scholarship and learning. The humanities |
Issue Date: | 2018 |
Publisher: | MDPI AG |
Abstract: | Folklore and sociolinguistics exist in a symbiotic relationship; more than that, at points—in the ethnography of communication and in ethnopoetics, for example—they overlap and become indistinguishable. As part of a reaction to the formal rigor and social detachment of Chomsky’s theoretical linguistics, sociolinguistics emerges in the mid-twentieth century to assess the role of language in social life. Folklorists join the cause and bring to it a commitment to in-depth ethnography and a longstanding engagement with artistic communication. In this essay, I trace key phases in the development of this interdisciplinary movement, revolutionary in its reorientation of language study to the messy but fascinating realm of speech usage. I offer the concept of performative efficacy, the notion that expressive culture performances have the capacity to shape attitude and action and thereby transform perceived realities, as a means of capturing the continuing promise of a sociolinguistically informed folkloristics. |
URI: | http://lrc.quangbinhuni.edu.vn:8181/dspace/handle/DHQB_123456789/3947 |
Appears in Collections: | Folklore |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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humanities-07-00009-v2.pdf | 217.49 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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