
Language and Woman's Place
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Content
- Intro
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editor's Introduction
- Author's Introduction: Language and Woman's Place Revisited
- THE ORIGINAL TEXT with Annotations by the Author
- Part I: Language and Woman's Place
- Part II: Why Women Are Ladies
- Annotations
- COMMENTARIES
- Part I: Contexts
- 1 Changing Places: Language and Woman's Place in Context
- 2 "Radical Feminist" as Label, Libel, and Laudatory Chant: The Politics of Theoretical Taxonomies in Feminist Linguistics
- 3 Positioning Ideas and Gendered Subjects: "Women's Language" Revisited
- 4 Language and Woman's Place: Picking Up the Gauntlet
- Part II: Concepts
- 5 Power, Lady, and Linguistic Politeness in Language and Woman's Place
- 6 Cultural Patterning in Language and Woman's Place
- 7 The Good Woman
- 8 Language and Marginalized Places
- Part III: Femininities
- 9 Exploring Women's Language in Japanese
- 10 "Women's Language" 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 Public Discourse and the Private Life of Little Girls: Language and Woman's Place and Language Socialization
- 12 Mother's Place in Language and Woman's Place
- Part IV: Power
- 13 Doing and Saying: Some Words on Women's Silence
- 14 Computer-Mediated Communication and Woman's Place
- 15 Linguistic Discrimination and Violence against Women: Discursive Practices and Material Effects
- 16 What Does a Focus on "Men's Language" Tell Us about Language and Woman's Place?
- Part V: Women's Places
- 17 Gender, Identity, and "Strong Language" in a Professional Woman's Talk
- 18 The New (and Improved?) Language and Place of Women in Japan
- 19 "I'm Every Woman": Black Women's (Dis)placement in Women's Language Study
- 20 The Anguish of Normative Gender: Sociolinguistic Studies among U.S. Latinas
- 21 Contradictions of the Indigenous Americas: Feminist Challenges to and from the Field
- Part VI: Sexualities
- 22 Language and Woman's Place: Blueprinting Studies of Gay Men's English
- 23 The Way We Wish We Were: Sexuality and Class in Language and Woman's Place
- 24 "I Am Woman, Hear Me Roar": The Importance of Linguistic Stereotype for Lesbian Identity Performances
- 25 As Much as We Use Language: Lakoff's Queer Augury
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
- Y
- Z
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