2016
DOI: 10.1111/aman.12528
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Linguistic Anthropology in 2015: Not the Study of Language

Abstract: The thesis of this essay is that linguistic anthropology is not the study of language. Rather, "language" functions as a permanently problematic, if indispensable, object for linguistic anthropological analysis and thought. This is because, as I suggest, the critical intervention of linguistic anthropology over the last 40 years has been its ethnographic focus on indexicality, in particular, the ways that indexical processes undermine language as an autonomous object, entangling it with other semiotic modaliti… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
14
0
2

Year Published

2017
2017
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
7
2

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 46 publications
(16 citation statements)
references
References 132 publications
(204 reference statements)
0
14
0
2
Order By: Relevance
“…Yet there is much value in focusing on mobility and movement to understand our contemporary world. This is particularly the case for linguistic anthropology, a discipline that does not approach language as “a coherent, autonomous object of analysis” but strives to understand language through its endless “dialectical displacement” (Nakassis , 331). Linguistic anthropology's commitment to Boasian “reckless empiricism” (Rodseth )—that is, embracing the total natural environment in which language is socioculturally grounded—constantly guides its followers toward contexts that challenge the notion of structurally isolated beingness of language, sites where language lives on in incessant flux, militating against static autonomy and dispersing into deep embeddedness in sociocultural practice.…”
Section: A Year In Movementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet there is much value in focusing on mobility and movement to understand our contemporary world. This is particularly the case for linguistic anthropology, a discipline that does not approach language as “a coherent, autonomous object of analysis” but strives to understand language through its endless “dialectical displacement” (Nakassis , 331). Linguistic anthropology's commitment to Boasian “reckless empiricism” (Rodseth )—that is, embracing the total natural environment in which language is socioculturally grounded—constantly guides its followers toward contexts that challenge the notion of structurally isolated beingness of language, sites where language lives on in incessant flux, militating against static autonomy and dispersing into deep embeddedness in sociocultural practice.…”
Section: A Year In Movementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A focus on scale draws attention to the entanglements of language with other analytical frames. As Nakassis () argued, not studying language entails a semiotic analysis of culture in which language may be a prominent, but not singular, area of investigation. We may do well to push this reconceptualization a step further and craft an even broader conception of ethnography in which the study of language is undertaken in conjunction with media and circulation.…”
Section: Metrics Of Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If our subfield remains a viable avenue for addressing inequalities, spanning the Boasian project of linguistic and cultural relativism to the regimentation of a monoglot standard in the United States (Silverstein ), to the systematic study of power through ethnographic research across the globe, this seems like a good moment to take stock and reformulate an agenda. Especially if linguistic anthropology is “not the study of language,” as Constantine Nakassis () provocatively wrote in his review of our field in 2015, then in 2016 it is fitting to ask: What can a return to the study of language offer us? Now what?…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…La question qui sert de titre à cet essai se veut, à dessein, provocante -d'autant que la notion d'idéologies linguistiques est largement utilisée en anthropologie linguistique comme en sociolinguistique, et fait l'objet de nombreux volumes, chapitres de manuels, etc. Dans un récent article dressant le bilan de l'année 2015 en anthropologie linguistique, Nakassis (2016) en fait l'un des thèmes principaux de la discipline, et depuis peu une revue francophone publiée au Canada (Circula, Revue d'idéologies linguistiques) lui est consacrée. Curieusement cependant, compte tenu de l'apport de la réflexion en français autour de la notion d'idéologie, et notamment à partir des travaux de Louis Althusser, c'est par l'Amérique du Nord que ce concept semble revenir en sociolinguistique francophone, et plus généralement européenne -nous disons « semble », car s'il revient, c'est souvent sous une forme détachée du programme de recherche dans lequel le terme a été initialement promu.…”
Section: L'idéologie Linguistique Une Notion Omniprésente ?unclassified