Title of article
Defining Dialect, Perceiving Dialect, and New Dialect Formation: Sarah Palin’s Speech
Author/Authors
Thomas Purnell Eric Raimy Joseph Salmons، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
25
From page
331
To page
355
Abstract
Nonlinguists prove surprisingly good at recognizing dialects, even as dialects rapidly evolve. During the 2008 U.S. presidential election, Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin’s speech was intensely discussed among linguists, the media, and laypeople. Though Palin is from Alaska, her speech was often identified with the Upper Midwest.The authors explore what this mismatch can tell us about dialects and their perception, starting from a description of Palin’s speech as commented on in the media.They review some pragmatic features and provide quantitative treatment of her “g-dropping.” Then, they undertake acoustic analysis of Palin’s vowels and final /z/ devoicing, including Western features and features that create an impression of her speech as Upper Midwestern. Regional settlement history, research on “new dialect formation,” and research on perception of variation inform the authors’ finding that a few acoustic and other characteristics trigger a specific national perception of Palin’s verbal behavior.
Keywords
American dialects style register sociolinguistic variation sociophonetics koinéization dialect perceptions
Journal title
Journal of English Linguistics(JELng)
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Journal of English Linguistics(JELng)
Record number
708262
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