Signs of Deference, Signs of Demeanour

Signs of Deference, Signs of Demeanour

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A study of interlocutor reference that significantly deepens our understanding of the ways in which self-other relations are linguistically mediated in social interaction, based on the analysis of Southeast Asian languages.  
Terms used by speakers to refer to themselves and their interlocutors form one of the ways that language expresses, defines, and creates a field for working out social relations. Because this field of study in sociolinguistics historically has focused on Indo-European languages, it has tended to dwell on references to the addressee—for example, the choice between tu and vous when addressing someone in French. This book uses the study of Southeast Asian languages to theorize interlocutor reference more broadly, significantly deepening our understanding of the ways in which self-other relations are linguistically mediated in social interaction. As the authors explain, Southeast Asian systems exceed in complexity and nuance the well-described cases of Europe in two basic ways. First, in many languages of Southeast Asia, a speaker must select an appropriate reference form not only for other/addressee but also for self/speaker. Second, in these languages, in addition to pronouns, speakers draw upon a range of common and proper nouns including names, kin terms, and titles, in referring to themselves and the addressee. Acts of interlocutor reference, therefore, inevitably do more than simply identify the speaker and addressee; they also convey information about the proposed relation between interlocutors. Bringing together studies from both small-scale and large, urbanized communities across Mainland and Insular Southeast Asia, this is an important contribution to the regional linguistic and anthropological literature.
 

Dwi Noverini Djenar is associate professor in Indonesian studies at the University of Sydney. Jack Sidnell is professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Toronto.
 
Interlocutor Reference in Southeast Asian Speech Communities: Sociolinguistic Patterns and Interactional Dynamics
Part 1: Systems
Asymmetries in the System of Person Reference in Kri, a Language of Upland Laos
Speaking of People in South-Central Java
Part 2: Practices
Vocatives in Javanese Conversation
New Patterns, New Practices: Exploring the Use of English Pronouns I and you in Asymmetrical Relations in Kuala Lumpur (KL) Malay Talk
Part 3: Intimacies
“Respect those above, yield to those below”: Civility and social hierarchy in Vietnamese interlocutor reference
“Friends who don’t throw each other away”: Friendship, pronouns, and relations on the edge in Luang Prabang, Laos
Interlocutor reference and deferential relations in Indonesian broadcast talk
Part 4: Theories
Interlocutor reference and the complexity of East and Southeast Asian honorific registers

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Dimensions 1 × 7 × 9 in