Rethinking Gender Principles in El Salvador: Evidence from /s/ Weakening

Franny D. Brogan, Deborah Yi
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Abstract

Abstract Previous research on /s/ weakening in Spanish has consistently aligned with Labovian principles: women prefer the prestige variant, usually [s], while men favor nonstandard, lenited variants. However, in Salvadoran Spanish—a dialect that weakens /s/ across syllable positions and shows allophonic variation beyond the tripartite paradigm of [s]/[h]/[∅]—gender-based lenition patterns contradict this generalization. This study examines the production of phonological /s/ by 72 Salvadorans balanced for region, urbanicity, age, and gender who participated in sociolinguistic interviews in El Salvador in 2015. We find that women not only lenite /s/ at higher rates than men overall, but also produce significantly more of the variants that carry the most local stigma. We further find that, counterintuitively, women are significantly more likely than men to lenite /s/ in utterance- and word-initial prosodic positions, which are stronger and more perceptually salient than medial and final tokens. We argue that these discrepancies are best understood by taking El Salvador’s unique historical and sociopolitical context into account. Specifically, we propose that a culture of state-sanctioned violence against women and the unprecedented threat of gangs in El Salvador have led to the social segregation and linguistic isolation of women, affording them little access to standard linguistic forms even as globalization, urbanization, industrialization, and migration facilitate a shift toward linguistic standardization.
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重新思考萨尔瓦多的性别原则:来自/s/弱化的证据
先前对西班牙语中/s/弱化的研究一直与Labovian原则一致:女性更喜欢威望变体,通常是[s],而男性更喜欢非标准的,有限制的变体。然而,在萨尔瓦多西班牙语中-一种跨音节位置弱化/s/并显示出超越[s]/[h]/[∅]三方范式的音素变化的方言-基于性别的lenition模式与这种概括相矛盾。本研究调查了2015年在萨尔瓦多参加社会语言学访谈的72名萨尔瓦多人的语音/s/的产生情况,这些人根据地区、城市化程度、年龄和性别进行了平衡。我们发现,总的来说,女性不仅比男性的遗传率更高,而且产生的变异也明显更多,这些变异携带着最具地方性的耻辱感。我们进一步发现,与直觉相反,女性比男性更有可能在话语和单词开头的韵律位置上出现/s/,这些位置比中间和最后的符号更强,在感知上更突出。我们认为,考虑到萨尔瓦多独特的历史和社会政治背景,才能最好地理解这些差异。具体地说,我们认为国家认可的对妇女的暴力文化和萨尔瓦多前所未有的帮派威胁导致了妇女的社会隔离和语言孤立,即使全球化、城市化、工业化和移民促进了向语言标准化的转变,她们也很难获得标准的语言形式。
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