The 1975 publication of Language and Woman's Place, with its argument that language is fundamental to gender inequality, inaugurated language and gender research. This volume presents the original text along with commentaries by Lakoff and 26 other leading scholars of language, gender, and sexuality. The new edition places the text in contemporary context for a new generation of readers.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
an exceptional piece of scholarship, and one must truly congratulate the editor for providing us with a brilliantly contextualised second edition of I
WPR^ ... The book establishes with authority I
WPR^'s status as the single most influential text in the history of language and gender. * Marlis Hellinger, Historiographia Linguistica *
Reihe
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Editions-Typ
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
Dicke: 20 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-19-516757-3 (9780195167573)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Robin Tolmach Lakoff is Professor of Linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley. Widely regarded as the founder of language and gender studies, she writes extensively about gender and power and is the author or coauthor of seven books and nearly one hundred articles.
Mary Bucholz is Assistant Professor of Linguistics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She has coedited several books on language and gender and is the author of numerous articles on race, class, and youth identities.
Autor*in
Professor of LinguisticsProfessor of Linguistics, University of California at Berkeley
Herausgeber*in
Associate Professor of LinguisticsAssociate Professor of Linguistics, University of California at Santa Barbara
Editor's Introduction
Author's Introduction
Language and Woman's Place: The Original Text with Annotations by Author
Part 1: Context
1: Mary Bucholtz: Changing Places: Language and Woman's Place in Context
2: Bonnie McElhinny: "Radical Feminist" as Label, Libel, and Laudatory Chant: The Politics of Theoretical Taxonomies in Feminist Linguistics
3: Sally McConnell-Ginet: Positioning Ideas and Gendered Subjects: "Women's Language" Revisited
4: Anna Livia: Language and Woman's Place: Picking Up the Gauntlet
Part 2: Concepts
5: Janet Holmes: Power, Lady, and Linguistic Politeness in Language and Woman's Place
6: Deborah Tannen: Cultural Patterning in Language and Woman's Place
7: Penelope Eckert: The Good Woman
8: Kira Hall: Language and Marginalized Places
Part 3: Femininities
9: Sachiko Ide: Exploring Woman's Language in Japan
10: Catherine Davies: "Woman's Langugae and Martha Stewart: From a Room of One's Own to a Home of One's Own to a Corporation of One's Own
11: Jenny Cook-Gumperz: Public Discourse and the Private Life of Little Girls: Language and Woman's Place and Language Socialization
12: Shari Kendall: Mother's Place in Language and Woman's Place
Part 4: Power
13: Miriam Meyerhoff: Doing and Saying: Some Words on Women's Silence
14: Susan Herring: Computer-Mediated Communication and Woman's Place
15: Susan Ehrlich: Linguistics Discrimination and Violence against Women: Discursive Practices and Material Effects
16: Scott Kiesling: What Does a Focus on "Men's Language" Tell Us about Language and Woman's Place?
Part 5: Women's Place
17: Judith Mattson Beam and Barbara Johnstone: Gender, Identity, and "Strong Language" in a Professional Woman's Talk
18: Toshiko Matsumoto: The New Language and Place of Women in Japan: Reflections on Language and Woman's Place
19: Marcyliena Morgan: "I'm Every Woman": Black Women's (Dis)placement in Women's Language Study
20: Norma Mendoza-Denton: The Anguish of Normative Gender: Sociolinguistic Studies among U.S. Latinas
21: Sara Trechter: Contradictions of the Indigenous Americas: Feminist Challenges to and from the Field
Part 6: Sexualities
22: William L. Leap: Language and Woman's Place: Blueprint Studies of Gay Men's English
23: Rudolf P. Gaudio: They Way We Wish We Were: Sexuality and Class in Language and Woman's Place
24: Robin Queen: "I Am Woman, Hear Me Roar": The Importance of Linguistics Stereotype for Lesbian Identity Performances
25: Rusty Barrett: As Much as We Use Language: Lakoff's Queer Augury