05308nam 2200613 a 450 991077880430332120230421050742.01-283-42388-X978661342388790-272-7419-3(CKB)2550000000079447(EBL)842913(OCoLC)773566941(SSID)ssj0000600656(PQKBManifestationID)11369011(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000600656(PQKBWorkID)10600466(PQKB)10940869(MiAaPQ)EBC842913(Au-PeEL)EBL842913(CaPaEBR)ebr10526902(EXLCZ)99255000000007944719980721d1998 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrAmerican sociolinguistics[electronic resource] theorists and theory groups /Stephen O. MurrayAmsterdam ;Philadelphia J. Benjaminsc19981 online resource (350 p.)Rev. ed. of: Theory groups and the study of language in North America.1-55619-532-X 90-272-2178-2 Includes bibliographical references (p. [267]-327) and index.AMERICAN SOCIOLINGUISTICS THEORISTS AND THEORY GROUPS; Copyright page; Title page; Dedication; Table of Contents; CHAPTER 1. Introduction; CHAPTER 2. Theory Groups in Science; 2.1 Groups and 'revolutions'; 2.2 Institutionalization; 2.3 Invisible Colleges and Scientific Networks; 2.3.1 Sociological specification of Kuhn's model; 2.3.2 Weighing the variables; 2.3.3 Formalization of the Griffith-Mullins Theory; CHAPTER 3. 1950's Studies of Lexicons and Psychiatry; 3.1 The Whorfian Vogue; 3.2 Studies of Native American Linguistic Acculturation; 3.3 Monis Swadesh and Lexicostatistics3.4 Berkeley Linguistics during the 1950's 3.5 Tragerian Explorations of 'Metalinguistic s'; 3.6 The Natural History of an Interview Project; 3.7 Gregory Bateson and the 'Palo Alto School'; 3.7.1 Theoretical summary; 3.7.2 Influence; 3.8 Ray Birdwhistell's Study of Nonverbal Communication; 3.9 Pike's ""Unified Theory"" and Burke's Dramaturgical Analysis; CHAPTER 4. Sociologies of Language; 4.1 The Chicago School Conception of Language Between the World Wars; 4.2 Cosmopolitan Communications; 4.3 Stanley Lieberson; 4.4 Joyce O. Hertzler; 4.5 John Reinecke; 4.6 Ralph Pieris4.7 Catholic University Urban Sociolinguistics CHAPTER 5. Language Contact and Early Sociolinguistics; 5.1 Einar Haugen; 5.2 Uriel Weinreich; 5.3 Joshua A. Fishman; 5.3.1 Students and Peers; 5.4 Wallace E. Lambert; 5.5 Roger Brown; 5.6 Exemplars of Sociolinguistics avant la lettre; 5.6.1 Address terms; 5.6.2 Goin' and explaining; 5.6.3 The Social Functions of Codes in Tucson and Los Angeles; 5.7 Summary; CHAPTER 6. The Ethnography of Speaking; 6.1 The California Network; 6.1.1 Via Poona; 6.1.2 William Bright; 6.1.3 Charles Ferguson; 6.1.4 John Gumperz; 6.1.5 Susan Ervin-Tripp; 6.1.6 Dell Hymes6.1.7 Anthropological linguistics at Berkeley, c. 19606.1.8 Non-contact with symbolic interactionists; 6.1.9 Summary; 6.2 The Program; 6.3 Acceptance of the Line of Work; 6.3.1 Access to publication; 6.3.2 Reception of early publications; 6.4 The First Generation: An Elite Specialty; 6.5 Foundation of the Center for Applied Linguistics; 6.6 Foundation of the SSRC Sociolinguistics Committee; 6.7 Exemplars; 6.8 Paradigm Shift Under a Rhetoric of Continuity; 6.8.1 From homogeneous speech communities to continua and repertoires; 6.8.2 Communicative competence and creativity6.8.3 Rhetoric of continuity 6.9 The Second Generation; 6.10 The Continued Non-Integration of Sociologists; 6.11 Institutionalization and Interdisciplinarity; 6.12 Theoretical Summary; CHAPTER 7. Related Perspectives; 7.1 Erving Goffman; 7.2 Conversation analysis; 7.2.1 Theoretical summary; 7.3 Basil Bernstein; 7.3.1 The Bernstein group; 7.3.2 Relationship to American Work; 7.4 William Labov; 7.4.1 Training and relation to earlier structuralist linguistics; 7.4.2 Prestige dialects; 7.4.3 Black English; 7.4.4 The context of Labov's work7.5 A (Belated) Note on 20th Century American DialectologyThis is a revised version of Theory Groups and the Study of Language in North America (1994), the post-World-War-II history of the emergence of sociolinguistics in North America that was described in Language in Society as "a heady combination of detailed scholarship, mordant wit, and sustained narrative designed to persuade even the skeptical reader that these myriad, often simultaneously emergent, ways of thinking about language are indeed interrelated. . . . This is an outspoken, engaging, rollicking, occasionally aggravating adventure in the history of these sciences as related to their prSociolinguisticsUnited StatesHistory20th centurySociolinguisticsHistory306.44/0973/0904Murray Stephen O183215Murray Stephen O183215MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910778804303321American sociolinguistics3736523UNINA