PHONOLOGICAL VARIATION AT THE INTERSECTION OF ETHNORACIAL IDENTITY, PLACE, AND STYLE IN WASHINGTON, D.C. A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of Georgetown University in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Linguistics By Anastasia Nylund, M.S. Washington, D.C. July 7, 2013 Copyright 2013 by Anastasia Nylund All Rights Reserved ii PHONOLOGICAL VARIATION AT THE INTERSECTION OF ETHNORACIAL IDENTITY, PLACE, AND STYLE IN WASHINGTON, D.C. Anastasia Nylund, M.S. Dissertation Advisor: Natalie Schilling, Ph.D. ABSTRACT This dissertation examines phonological variation in Washington, DC, which has remained under-explored in urban sociolinguistics. The paucity of research on language in DC relates to its dialectal marginality, its unique African American (AA) and European American (EA) settlement histories, and its current public image as a cosmopolitan, transient city. Three phonological features in 21 sociolinguistic interviews with lifelong AA and EA Washingtonians are analyzed quantitatively and qualitatively: /l/ vocalization (coo’ for cool), -in (runnin’ for running) and Coronal Stop Deletion (eas’ en’ for east end). I analyze the features’ community- level patterning, as well as inter- and intragroup distributions and stylistic (intraspeaker) uses of the features towards interactional enactments of speakers’ Washingtonian identities. At the community level, Coronal Stop Deletion is not significantly affected by ethnoracial affiliation, sex, age, or educational attainment; -in and /l/ vocalization are more extensively used among AAs than EAs. The overall absence of /l/ vocalization among EAs supports previous analyses of /l/ vocalization in West Virginia and /ay/ monophthongization in Maryland, which attribute loss of these Southern features to increased alignment with DC, the region’s economic hub. While the community-level links between the features and AA identity are expected, significant intragroup diversity is present and demands closer attention. Not all AAs use the three features similarly, and speakers with similar life experiences are linguistically diverse. I call the constellations of features within groups and individuals stylistic repertoires, following the notions of ethnolinguistic repertoire (Benor 2010) and styling (Coupland iii 2001, 2007), foregrounding the use of ethnoracially-linked features toward a variety of goals in interactions, including ethnoracial solidarity but also the construction of different types of local identities. Motivations for variation within a community are inaccessible without attention to the stylistic use of variable phenomena in discourse about locally salient themes, and this is particularly important for studying diverse and contested communities like Washington, DC. This dissertation contributes to sociolinguistic inquiry through an integrated, qualitative and quantitative analysis of variation in a community that defies easy description, and foregrounds intragroup diversity as a key aspect of contemporary urban sociolinguistics. iv Acknowledgments This dissertation is a piece of scholarship, but it is also the product of a long, non-linear, messy, and elating process. It has been part of me during an important time; it’s allowed me room to breathe and think, to challenge myself and to become open to the world. All along the way, I have been part of an intellectual community whose influence on the professional vision that permeates all areas of my life cannot be overstated. Thank you to my dissertation committee for setting the bar high and showing me how to clear it. To my dissertation advisor, Dr. Natalie Schilling, I owe perhaps the greatest thanks. Natalie, thank you for being there to offer challenges, support, and a new perspective, and for teaching me the most important lesson for me as a linguist who just cannot stay away from the messy data we both love: Trust yourself, remember your positionality, and Get. It. Done. I owe my commitment to the individual as social actor to Dr. Rob Podesva. Rob, thank you for never taking “I don’t know!” for an answer, and for pushing me to pull something cogent out of the stream of consciousness that often starts my research process. Thanks for the laughs, the coffees, and your kind but firm insistence that I lay off the doubt and get to work. The backbone of my professional vision as a linguist is this: Every speaker is an authentic speaker. Dr. Heidi Hamilton helped me see this in her Cross-Disciplinary Discourse Analysis seminar. Heidi, thank you for your patience and guidance on this journey: If not for your advice, my vision of linguists’ place in the world would be vastly different. To my friends and colleagues at Georgetown and beyond – Patrick Callier, Amelia Tseng, Anna Marie Trester, Sakiko Kajino, Jessi Grieser, Marissa Fond, Sinae Lee, Jinsok Lee, Jermay Reynolds, Mackenzie Price, Kerstin Sondermann, Corinne Seals, Cala Zubair, Jennifer Nycz, Mark Sicoli, and everyone else (there’s just too many!): Thank you all for the good times, v the “does this make sense?” sessions, for the shared hotel rooms and car pools, for sharing conundrums, and triumphs, and, of course, for the pep talks and Epi happy hours. There are three scholars whose early influence during my time at Cardiff University and Georgetown University has shaped my thinking about language as a semiotic system whose users bring it to life. To Dr. Deborah Schiffrin, Dr. Deborah Tannen, and Dr. Lise Fontaine: Thank you for your inspiration in the early years and for your continued support. To all the Washingtonians whose lives have touched mine through this work: Thank you for sharing your stories, for teaching us, for making DC what it is. To my family, who live the most authentic lives I know: Thank you for understanding this path. Thank you for making me who I am. Finally, to Helen, who has seen me through this: I am my best self with you. Thank you. vi For Elfrida vii Table of Contents Chapter 1. Introduction and background 1 1.1 Initial questions 1 1.1.1 Basics of the study 1 1.1.2 Key concepts: Style, styling, and social associations 7 1.1.3 Motivations for studying language in DC 11 1.2 Geography: North and South 22 1.3 Demography 24 1.4 DC, history and authenticity 29 1.5. Ethnoracial affiliation and income 33 1.6 Discourse(s) of demographic change and gentrification 39 1.7 Metalinguistic commentary 42 1.7.1 Why look at metalinguistic commentary? 42 1.7.2 Metalinguistic commentary about DC 45 1.8 Diversity’s centrality to discourses and understandings of DC 57 1.9 Previous studies of language in Washington, DC 60 1.10 Organization of the dissertation 64 Chapter 2. Methods and data collection 68 2.1 Introduction 68 2.2 Choice of demographic category labels 68 2.3 Language and Communication in the Washington, DC, Metropolitan Area (LCDC) 72 2.3.1 The LCDC interviews 73 2.3.2 LCDC studies to date 75 2.4 Interviews 77 2.5 Speakers 79 2.6 Variables and variants under study 81 2.6.1 Characteristics and coding methods for /l/-vocalization 83 2.6.2 Characteristics and coding methods for Coronal Stop Deletion 92 2.6.3 Characteristics and coding methods for –in 96 2.6.4 Coding for discourse context 99 2.7 Quantitative analysis 102 2.8 Summary 107 viii Chapter 3. /L/ vocalization in Washington, DC 109 3.1 Introduction 109 3.2 Studies of /l/ vocalization in English 112 3.3 Results 116 3.3.1 Preceding phonological environment 120 3.3.2 Following phonological environment 122 3.3.3 Ethnoracial affiliation and speaker sex 124 3.4 /L/ vocalization and place identity in DC 128 3.4.1 The North, the South, and the transitional cities 129 3.4.2 DC’s influence: Sound change and loss of Southern norms 134 3.5 Summary 139 Chapter 4. Coronal Stop Deletion and –in in Washington, DC 140 4.1 Introduction 140 4.2 CSD, -in, and their social correlates 141 4.2.1 Ethnoracial affiliation 143 4.2.2 Socioeconomic class 146 4.2.3 Region 150 4.2.4 Situational formality 154 4.3 Interactional meanings of CSD and –in 158 4.4. Perception of CSD and –in 164 4.5 Quantitative patterns of CSD and –in in Washington, DC 171 4.5.1 Linguistic and social conditioning of CSD 171 4.5.2 Social diversity and CSD in Washington, DC 175 4.5.3 Linguistic and social conditioning of -in 180 4.5.4 Social diversity and -in in Washington, DC 183 4.6 Summary 185 ix Chapter 5. Stylistic repertoires and styling a Washingtonian identity 189 5.1 Introduction 189 5.1.1 Definitions of key terms: Code, ethnolect, styling, and stylization 192 5.2 The community, the individual, and the repertoire 195 5.2.1 Early studies of intra-group variation 195 5.2.2 Ethnoracial affiliation and linguistic repertoires 202 5.2.3 Intra-group variability and ideology 207 5.2.4 Why repertoires in Washington, DC? 209 5.3 Self-expression and the stylistic repertoire 211 5.3.1 The stylistic repertoire 213 5.4 Stylistic repertoires: Social similarity, linguistic diversity 216 5.4.1 Stylistic repertoires among Washingtonians 216 5.4.2 Stylistic ranges and ethnoracial affiliation 218 5.4.3 Stylistic ranges and correlations between the features 220 5.4.4 Ethnoracial groups and the stylistic repertoire 225 5.4.5 Stylistic repertoires among DC African Americans 226 5.4.6 Stylistic repertoires among DC European Americans 232 5.5 Styling Washingtonianness in the sociolinguistic interview 236 5.5.1 Zara 236 5.5.2 Mona 246 5.5.3 Mick 257 5.6 Summary 265 Chapter 6. Conclusion 271 6.1 Chapter summary 272 6.2 Contributions 277 6.3 Limitations and future directions 279 6.3.1 Socioeconomic class in Washington, DC 280 6.3.2 The necessity of discourse-oriented perspectives on variation 282 6.3.3 A vernacular baseline for DC? Future work on language change 288 Appendix 1. Transcription conventions (adapted from Bucholtz 2011 and Tannen, Kendall and Gordon 2007) 290 Appendix 2. Sample LCDC interview modules 291 References 293 x
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