Language and Gender
A Reader
Jennifer Coates(Editor)
Blackwell Publishers
Published on 26. December 1997
Book
Hardback
544 pages
978-0-631-19594-8 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Description
This wide-ranging Reader comprises a valuable anthology of the key essays in the study of language and gender. Edited by one of the pioneers in the field, it introduces students to the main topics through providing a selection of key papers written by leading figures in language and gender study. Topics covered include: gender differences in pronunciation and grammar; gender differences in conversational practice; conversational dominance in mixed talk; same-sex talk; women's talk in the public domain; theoretical debates (gender or power? difference or dominance?). The Reader concludes with three key papers which suggest directions in which language and gender research might develop.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 244 mm
Width: 172 mm
Weight
1193 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-631-19594-8 (9780631195948)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
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03/2011
2nd Edition
Wiley
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Content
1. Introduction.Part I: Gender Differences in Pronunciation and Grammar:2. Yanyuwa: Men Speak One Way, Women Another: John Bradley.3. Sex and Covert Prestige: Peter Trudgill.4. Linguistic Variation and Social Function: Jenny Cheshire.5. Girl-Talk/Boy-Talk: Sex Differences in Adolescent Speech: Edina Eisikovits.6. Black Women in the Rural South: Conservative and Innovative: Patricia Nichols.Part II: Gender Differences in Conversational Practice:8. How and Why are Women More Polite: Penelope Brown.9. Complimenting: A Positive Politeness Strategy: Janet Holmes.10. Co-operation and Competition Across Girls' Play Activities: Marjorie Goodwin.11. Peasant Men Can't Get Wives: Language Change and Sex Roles in a Bilingual Community: Susan Gal.Part III: Conversational Dominance in Mixed Talk:12. Women's Place in Everyday Talk: Candace West and Don Zimmerman.13. Talk Control: An Illustration From the Classroom of Problems in Analysing Male Dominance in Conversation: Joan Swann.14. The Sounds of Silence: How Men Silence Women in Marital Relations: Victoria DeFrancisco.15. Participation in Electronic Discourse in a "Feminist Field": Susan Herring et al.Part IV: Same-Sex Talk:16. The Talk of Women Friends: Fern Johnson and Elizabeth Aries.17. Gossip Revisited: Language in All-Female Groups: Jennifer Coates.18. Don't Try and Make Out That I'm Nice: The Different Strategies Women and Men Use When Gossiping: Jane Pilkington.19. Performing Gender Identity: Young Men's Talk and the Construction of Heterosexual Masculinity: Deborah Cameron.20. Sporting Formulae in New Zealand English: Two Models of Male Solidarity: Koenraad Kuiper.Part V: Women's Talk in the Public Domain:21. Female Speakers of Japanese in Transition: K. A. Reynolds.22. I Don't Smile Much Any More: Affect, Gender and the Discourse of Pittsburgh Police Officers: Bonnie McElhinny.23. Not Just "Doctor's Orders": Directive-Response Sequences in Patients Visits to Women and Men Physicians: Candace West.24. Women's Ways: Interactive Patterns in Predominantly Female Research Teams: Marie Wilson Nelson.Part VI: Theoretical Debates (I): Gender or Power?:25."Women's Language" or "Powerless Language": William O'Barr and Bowman Atkins.26. Are Powerless Communication Strategies the Japanese Norm?: Patricia Wetzel.27. When the Doctor is a Lady: Candace West.Part VII: Theoretical Debates (II): Difference or Dominance?28. A Cultural Approach to Male-Female Miscommunication: Daniel Maltz and Ruth Borker.29. Talk in the Intimate Relationship: His and Hers: Deborah Tannen.30. Selling the Apolitical: Senta Troemal-Ploetz.Part VIII: Language and Gender: Looking to the Future:31. Women's Talk: the Question of Sociolinguistic Universals: Janet Holmes.32. Communities of Practice: Where Gender, Language and Power All Live: Penelope Eckert and Sally McConnell-Ginet.33. The Question of Questions: Beyond Binary Thinking: Janet Bing and Victoria Bergvall.