European University Institute Library

Creating Belonging in San Francisco Chinatown’s Diasporic Community, Morphosyntactic Aspects of Indexing Ethnic Identity, by Adina Staicov

Label
Creating Belonging in San Francisco Chinatown’s Diasporic Community, Morphosyntactic Aspects of Indexing Ethnic Identity, by Adina Staicov
Language
eng
resource.imageBitDepth
0
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Creating Belonging in San Francisco Chinatown’s Diasporic Community
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
1114967197
Responsibility statement
by Adina Staicov
Series statement
Springer eBooks.
Sub title
Morphosyntactic Aspects of Indexing Ethnic Identity
Summary
“This is an engaging and original study combining quasi-experimental data with ethnographical observations, looking at identity politics and morphosyntactic variations of multilingual Chinese in San Francisco’s Chinatown. It is a welcome addition to the growing body of literature on the sociolinguistics of ethnic identity.” -- Li Wei, Chair of Applied Linguistics, University College London, UK This book presents a much-needed discussion on ethnic identification and morphosyntactic variation in San Francisco Chinatown—a community that has received very little attention in linguistic research. An investigation of original, interactive speech data sheds light on how first- and second-generation Chinese Americans signal (ethnic) identity through morphosyntactic variation in English and on how they co-construct identity discursively. After an introduction to the community’s history, the book provides background information on ethnic varieties in North America. This discussion grounds the present book within existing research and illustrates how studies on ethnic varieties of English have evolved. The book then proceeds with a description of quantitative and qualitative results on linguistic variation and ethnic identity. These analyses show how linguistic variation is only one way of signalling belonging to a community and highlight that Chinese Americans draw on a variety of sources, most notably the heritage language, to construct and negotiate (ethnic) identity. This book will be of particular interest to linguists - particularly academics working in sociolinguistics, language and identity, and language variation - but also to scholars interested in related issues such as migration, discrimination, and ethnicity. Adina Staicov is Assistant Professor at Hiroshima University, Japan, where she teaches classes on Academic Writing and English for Academic Purposes.--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: San Francisco Chinatown: Introducing the community -- Chapter 3: Ethnolinguistic variation in North America -- Chapter 4: Ethnic identity and morphosyntactic variation in San Francisco Chinatown -- Chapter 5: Constructing Chinese Americanness in San Francisco Chinatown -- Chapter 6: Conclusion
Content
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