Language and Belonging
Local Categories and Practices in a Guatemalan Highland Community
Series:
Rita Vallentin
In this book, the author introduces belonging from a sociolinguistic perspective as a concept that is accomplished in interaction. Belonging can be expressed linguistically in social, spatial and temporal categories – indexing rootedness, groupness and cohesion. It can also be captured through shared linguistic practices within a group, e.g. collectively shared narrative practices. Using conversation analysis and an analysis of narrative as practice bolstered with ethnographic knowledge, the author shows how belonging is tied to locally contextualized use of deictics and to collectively shared narrations of the past in a Guatemalan community. The book examines the understudied phenomenon of belonging at the intersection of pragmatics and linguistic anthropology.
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- Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Warszawa, Wien, 2019. XXIV, 296 pp., 2 fig. col., 10 fig. b/w, 6 tables
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- About the author(s)/editor(s)
- About the book
- This eBook can be cited
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Transcription Convention
- Abstract
- Zusammenfassung
- Resumo
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1. Belonging and Language Use in Current Research
- 1.2. Empirical Foundations: The Comunidad Nueva Alianza and its Story.
- 1.3. Outline of the Book
- 2. Belonging and Identification
- 2.1. Making Sense of Ourselves and Others
- 2.2. Processes of Identification
- 2.3. Personal and Social Identification
- 2.4. Social Identification and Groups
- 2.5. From Social Positioning to Belonging
- 2.6. Concepts of Belonging
- 2.6.1. Spatial Belonging
- 2.6.2. Social Belonging
- 2.6.2.1 Intersected Belonging: Social Location and Social Positionality
- 2.6.2.2 Regimes of Social Belonging
- 2.6.3. Temporal Belonging
- 2.7. Conclusion: Conceptualization of Belonging
- 3. Doing Belonging
- 3.1. Language and Belonging
- 3.2. The Practice Approach in Contemporary Linguistics and Social Sciences
- 3.3. Doing Belonging
- 3.4. Communities of Practice
- 3.5. Interim Conclusion
- 4. Tracing Belonging in Spoken Data
- 4.1. Membership Categorization and Conversation Analysis
- 4.2. Positioning
- 4.3. Narrative as Practice
- 4.3.1. Narrative and Belonging
- 4.3.2. Positioning in Narrative
- 4.4. Interim Conclusion – What to Do with the Data?
- 5. Data Collection and Processing
- 5.1. The Field
- 5.1.1. Population
- 5.1.2. Location and Structure
- 5.1.3. Organization and Projects
- 5.2. Accessing the Field
- 5.3. The Researcher as an Outsider Participant
- 5.4. The Corpus
- 5.4.1. Narrative Accounts from Semi-structured Interviews
- 5.4.2. Narratives for Visitors
- 5.4.3. Interactions with Outsiders
- 5.4.4. Community Interactions
- 5.4.5. Fieldnotes
- 5.5. Data Transcription and Selection
- 6. Belonging as a Local and Interactional Problem
- 6.1. The Setting
- 6.2. Problematizing the Term Étnico
- 6.3. Adding Language as a Relevant Category
- 6.4. Processing the Étnico Question
- 6.5. Processing the Language Question
- 6.6. Clashing Category Systems
- 6.7. Interactional Positions
- 6.8. Interim Conclusion: Belonging as a Local and Interactional Problem
- 7. Narrating as a Local Practice of Belonging
- 7.1. The Narrative Corpus
- 7.2. Types of Narrations and Types of Narrators
- 7.3. Stories by Practiced Narrators
- 7.3.1. Positioning as Narrative Experts
- 7.3.1.1 Navigating Interactional Context and Story Structure
- 7.3.1.2 Displaying Expert Knowledge: Chronology and Detail
- 7.3.2. Positioning Own and Other Voices
- 7.3.2.1 Speaking on Behalf of the Community
- 7.3.2.2 Different Voices
- 7.3.3. Interim Conclusion: Stories by Practiced Narrators
- 7.4. Spontaneous Narratives
- 7.4.1. Positioning the Narrated Self
- 7.4.2. Interim Conclusion: Spontaneous Narratives
- 7.5. Re-Narrated Stories
- 7.5.1. ‘It says’ – The Story as Community Knowledge
- 7.5.2. ‘There is’ – Generalization in Re-Narration
- 7.5.3. ‘We were workers’ – We-voices in Re-Narrations
- 7.5.4. Interim Conclusion: Re-Narrated Stories
- 7.6. One Story – Thirty Versions – Shared Core Elements
- 7.7. Interim Conclusion: Narrating as a Local Practice of Belonging
- 8. Excursus
- 8.1. Excursus I: Grounding Belonging in the Local Adverb aquí
- 8.2. Excursus II: Regimes of Belonging
- 9. Summary and Discussion
- 10. Conclusion and Prospects
- Bibliography
- Appendix
- A. Speaker Table
- B. Interview Questionnaire
- Series index
List of Figures
Chapter
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Extract
1 Simple Map of the Nueva Alianza
2 Relations of the Community and the Company
3 Speaker and Topic Orientation in Extract 1
4 Category System of the Trainer for the “Ethnic Group”
5 Speaker and Topic Orientation in Extract 2
6 Speaker and Topic Orientation in Extract 3
7 Speaker and Topic Orientation in Extract 5
8 Narrative Structure JavierI
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Or login to access all content.- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- About the author(s)/editor(s)
- About the book
- This eBook can be cited
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Transcription Convention
- Abstract
- Zusammenfassung
- Resumo
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1. Belonging and Language Use in Current Research
- 1.2. Empirical Foundations: The Comunidad Nueva Alianza and its Story.
- 1.3. Outline of the Book
- 2. Belonging and Identification
- 2.1. Making Sense of Ourselves and Others
- 2.2. Processes of Identification
- 2.3. Personal and Social Identification
- 2.4. Social Identification and Groups
- 2.5. From Social Positioning to Belonging
- 2.6. Concepts of Belonging
- 2.6.1. Spatial Belonging
- 2.6.2. Social Belonging
- 2.6.2.1 Intersected Belonging: Social Location and Social Positionality
- 2.6.2.2 Regimes of Social Belonging
- 2.6.3. Temporal Belonging
- 2.7. Conclusion: Conceptualization of Belonging
- 3. Doing Belonging
- 3.1. Language and Belonging
- 3.2. The Practice Approach in Contemporary Linguistics and Social Sciences
- 3.3. Doing Belonging
- 3.4. Communities of Practice
- 3.5. Interim Conclusion
- 4. Tracing Belonging in Spoken Data
- 4.1. Membership Categorization and Conversation Analysis
- 4.2. Positioning
- 4.3. Narrative as Practice
- 4.3.1. Narrative and Belonging
- 4.3.2. Positioning in Narrative
- 4.4. Interim Conclusion – What to Do with the Data?
- 5. Data Collection and Processing
- 5.1. The Field
- 5.1.1. Population
- 5.1.2. Location and Structure
- 5.1.3. Organization and Projects
- 5.2. Accessing the Field
- 5.3. The Researcher as an Outsider Participant
- 5.4. The Corpus
- 5.4.1. Narrative Accounts from Semi-structured Interviews
- 5.4.2. Narratives for Visitors
- 5.4.3. Interactions with Outsiders
- 5.4.4. Community Interactions
- 5.4.5. Fieldnotes
- 5.5. Data Transcription and Selection
- 6. Belonging as a Local and Interactional Problem
- 6.1. The Setting
- 6.2. Problematizing the Term Étnico
- 6.3. Adding Language as a Relevant Category
- 6.4. Processing the Étnico Question
- 6.5. Processing the Language Question
- 6.6. Clashing Category Systems
- 6.7. Interactional Positions
- 6.8. Interim Conclusion: Belonging as a Local and Interactional Problem
- 7. Narrating as a Local Practice of Belonging
- 7.1. The Narrative Corpus
- 7.2. Types of Narrations and Types of Narrators
- 7.3. Stories by Practiced Narrators
- 7.3.1. Positioning as Narrative Experts
- 7.3.1.1 Navigating Interactional Context and Story Structure
- 7.3.1.2 Displaying Expert Knowledge: Chronology and Detail
- 7.3.2. Positioning Own and Other Voices
- 7.3.2.1 Speaking on Behalf of the Community
- 7.3.2.2 Different Voices
- 7.3.3. Interim Conclusion: Stories by Practiced Narrators
- 7.4. Spontaneous Narratives
- 7.4.1. Positioning the Narrated Self
- 7.4.2. Interim Conclusion: Spontaneous Narratives
- 7.5. Re-Narrated Stories
- 7.5.1. ‘It says’ – The Story as Community Knowledge
- 7.5.2. ‘There is’ – Generalization in Re-Narration
- 7.5.3. ‘We were workers’ – We-voices in Re-Narrations
- 7.5.4. Interim Conclusion: Re-Narrated Stories
- 7.6. One Story – Thirty Versions – Shared Core Elements
- 7.7. Interim Conclusion: Narrating as a Local Practice of Belonging
- 8. Excursus
- 8.1. Excursus I: Grounding Belonging in the Local Adverb aquí
- 8.2. Excursus II: Regimes of Belonging
- 9. Summary and Discussion
- 10. Conclusion and Prospects
- Bibliography
- Appendix
- A. Speaker Table
- B. Interview Questionnaire
- Series index