Ethnography in sociolinguistic studies of youth language

In Lithuanian sociolinguistics ethnography is a new method; there are no comprehensive ethnographic studies. The main purpose of this paper is to introduce the reader to ethnography and to show why it is important to include ethnography in linguistic studies and how this method can enrich the analy...

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Main Author: Aurelija Čekuolytė
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Vilnius University Press 2012-10-01
Series:Taikomoji kalbotyra
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journals.vu.lt/taikomojikalbotyra/article/view/17253
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spelling doaj-fdacab3f474742f185dab323f6743cc42020-11-25T03:49:55ZdeuVilnius University PressTaikomoji kalbotyra2029-89352012-10-01110.15388/TK.2012.17253Ethnography in sociolinguistic studies of youth languageAurelija Čekuolytė0Institute of Lithuanian Language, Lithuania In Lithuanian sociolinguistics ethnography is a new method; there are no comprehensive ethnographic studies. The main purpose of this paper is to introduce the reader to ethnography and to show why it is important to include ethnography in linguistic studies and how this method can enrich the analysis of linguistic material. When applying the ethnographic method it is not only possible to provide a picture of the distribution of linguistic variables in the community, but also to discover the social meaning which is associated with those variables. What is unique about ethnography is that it allows the scientist to discover social meanings instead of presupposing them and to examine the construction and organization of the social meaning of linguistic variables. Even though ethnographic studies are often treated as case studies, the results of a well-constructed ethnographic study are reliable and replicable, for instance, the ethnographically discovered social categories and social meanings, associated with them, can be tested in a different community with a help of match-guise technique. Following the sociolinguistic wave theory, I explain how and why ethnography has been employed in sociolinguistic studies. The studies in the first sociolinguistic wave applied survey and quantitative methods to examine the relation between linguistic variation and the traditional social categories – class, age, sex, and ethnicity. However, the quantitative methods were not sufficient enough in explaining which social mechanisms caused linguistic variation. Studies in the second wave employed ethnography in order to find the relation between linguistic variation and locally determined social categories. Studies in the third wave departed from the dialect-based approach of the first two waves, employed stylistic practice approach and examined any linguistic material that is socially meaningful in the community. I also discuss the main aspects of ethnographic method: participant observation, fieldnotes, ethnographic interview and other types of interviews. I come in with advice for researchers who plan to use ethnography in their research. The examples of ethnographic studies that I’m using in my paper are mostly taken from studies of youth language. Nevertheless, the paper can also be useful to any researcher who is willing to conduct an ethnographic sociolinguistic study. https://www.journals.vu.lt/taikomojikalbotyra/article/view/17253none
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aurelija Čekuolytė
spellingShingle Aurelija Čekuolytė
Ethnography in sociolinguistic studies of youth language
Taikomoji kalbotyra
none
author_facet Aurelija Čekuolytė
author_sort Aurelija Čekuolytė
title Ethnography in sociolinguistic studies of youth language
title_short Ethnography in sociolinguistic studies of youth language
title_full Ethnography in sociolinguistic studies of youth language
title_fullStr Ethnography in sociolinguistic studies of youth language
title_full_unstemmed Ethnography in sociolinguistic studies of youth language
title_sort ethnography in sociolinguistic studies of youth language
publisher Vilnius University Press
series Taikomoji kalbotyra
issn 2029-8935
publishDate 2012-10-01
description In Lithuanian sociolinguistics ethnography is a new method; there are no comprehensive ethnographic studies. The main purpose of this paper is to introduce the reader to ethnography and to show why it is important to include ethnography in linguistic studies and how this method can enrich the analysis of linguistic material. When applying the ethnographic method it is not only possible to provide a picture of the distribution of linguistic variables in the community, but also to discover the social meaning which is associated with those variables. What is unique about ethnography is that it allows the scientist to discover social meanings instead of presupposing them and to examine the construction and organization of the social meaning of linguistic variables. Even though ethnographic studies are often treated as case studies, the results of a well-constructed ethnographic study are reliable and replicable, for instance, the ethnographically discovered social categories and social meanings, associated with them, can be tested in a different community with a help of match-guise technique. Following the sociolinguistic wave theory, I explain how and why ethnography has been employed in sociolinguistic studies. The studies in the first sociolinguistic wave applied survey and quantitative methods to examine the relation between linguistic variation and the traditional social categories – class, age, sex, and ethnicity. However, the quantitative methods were not sufficient enough in explaining which social mechanisms caused linguistic variation. Studies in the second wave employed ethnography in order to find the relation between linguistic variation and locally determined social categories. Studies in the third wave departed from the dialect-based approach of the first two waves, employed stylistic practice approach and examined any linguistic material that is socially meaningful in the community. I also discuss the main aspects of ethnographic method: participant observation, fieldnotes, ethnographic interview and other types of interviews. I come in with advice for researchers who plan to use ethnography in their research. The examples of ethnographic studies that I’m using in my paper are mostly taken from studies of youth language. Nevertheless, the paper can also be useful to any researcher who is willing to conduct an ethnographic sociolinguistic study.
topic none
url https://www.journals.vu.lt/taikomojikalbotyra/article/view/17253
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