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The potential of ethnographic drama in the representation, interpretation, and democratization of sociolinguistic research
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Identity construction and perception of violence by female residents of a domestic violence shelter
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Discourses on competition and international student diversity in Higher Education: a linguistic ethnography on a Midlands based university
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Stereotypes and chronotopes: The peasant and the cosmopolitan in narratives about migration
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Translanguaging and Public Service Encounters: Language Learning in the Library
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Blurred vision? 'Superdiversity' as a lens in research on communication in border contexts
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The development of deaf legal discourse
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In: The Routledge Handbook of Language and Superdiversity (2018)
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Translanguaging and translation: the construction of social difference across city spaces
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A linguistic ethnographic perspective on Kazakhstan’s trinity of languages: language ideologies and identities in a multilingual university community
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The 'other woman' in a mother and daughter relationship: The case of Mami Ji
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Translanguaging and the body
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Abstract:
This article reports communicative interactions with a focus on the body as a dimension of the semiotic repertoire. The research context is a four-year, multi-site linguistic ethnography which investigates how people communicate in superdiverse cities in the UK. In the setting of a butcher’s stall in a city market we consider three interactions at a particular market stall between butchers and their customers. In the first, gesture is deployed as a resource by both an English butcher’s assistant and his customer. In the second, we examine the body as a resource in the semiotic repertoire of a Chinese butcher as he negotiates a faux haggling interaction with East European customers. In the third example, also recorded as field notes, a Chinese woman employs a ‘Chinese’ gesture to represent the number of pieces of offal she wishes to purchase from an English butcher’s assistant. Each of the examples was recorded during an extended period of ethnographic field work in Birmingham Bull Ring market. Through detailed analysis of these interactions we argue that when people’s biographical and linguistic histories barely overlap, they translanguage through the deployment of wide-ranging semiotic repertoires.
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Keyword:
body; gesture; markets; semiotic repertoire; superdiversity; Translanguaging
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/27866 https://doi.org/10.1080/14790718.2017.1315809 http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/27866/1/Blackledge-Creese%202017.pdf
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Heteroglossia, ideology and identity in a Birmingham Chinese complementary school: a linguistic ethnography
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A linguistic ethnographic study of young American novice teachers in Korea: a policy into practice
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Discursive Shadowing in Linguistic Ethnography. Situated Practices and Circulating Discourses in Multilingual Schools
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