The Indeterminacy of Social Meaning Linked to ‘Mexico’ and ‘Texas’ Spanish: Examining Monoglossic Language Ideologies among Heritage and L2 Spanish Listeners

IF 0.9 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS Languages Pub Date : 2023-11-14 DOI:10.3390/languages8040266
Brendan Regan, Jazmyn L. Martinez
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Abstract

This study examines how implied speaker nationality, which serves as a proxy for bilingual/monolingual status, influences social perception and linguistic evaluation. A modified matched-guise experiment was created with the speech of eight bilingual U.S. Spanish speakers from Texas talking about family traditions; the speech stimuli remained the same, but the social information provided about the speakers–whether they were said to be from Mexico (implied monolingual) or from Texas (implied bilingual)–varied. Based on 140 listeners’ responses (77 L2 Spanish listeners, 63 heritage Spanish listeners), quantitative analyses found that overall listeners evaluated ‘Mexico’ voices as more able to teach Spanish than ‘Texas’ voices. However, only heritage listeners perceived ‘Mexico’ voices as being of higher socioeconomic status and of more positive social affect than ‘Texas’ voices. Qualitative comments similarly found that heritage listeners evaluated ‘Mexico’ voices more favorably in speech quality and confidence than ‘Texas’ voices. The implications are twofold: (i) the social information of implied monolingualism/bilingualism influences listeners’ social perceptions of a speaker, reflecting monoglossic language ideologies; and (ii) there exists indeterminacy between language and social meaning that varies based on differences in lived experiences between L2 and heritage Spanish listeners. Extending on previous findings of indeterminacy between linguistic variants and meaning, the current study shows this also applies to (implied) language varieties, demonstrating the role of language ideologies in mediating social perception.
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与“墨西哥”和“德克萨斯”西班牙语相关的社会意义的不确定性:传统和二语西班牙语听众的单语语言意识形态研究
本研究探讨隐含说话者国籍,作为双语/单语地位的代理,如何影响社会感知和语言评价。我们做了一个修改后的配对伪装实验,让八位来自德克萨斯州的讲双语的美国西班牙语者谈论家庭传统;言语刺激保持不变,但提供的关于说话者的社会信息——他们是来自墨西哥(暗示的单语)还是来自德克萨斯州(暗示的双语)——有所不同。根据140名听众的回答(77名第二语言西班牙语听众,63名传统西班牙语听众),定量分析发现,总体而言,听众认为“墨西哥”的声音比“德克萨斯”的声音更能教授西班牙语。然而,只有传统听众认为“墨西哥”的声音比“德克萨斯”的声音具有更高的社会经济地位和更积极的社会影响。定性评论同样发现,传统听众在语音质量和自信方面对“墨西哥”声音的评价高于“德克萨斯”声音。隐含的单语/双语的社会信息影响听者对说话者的社会感知,反映了单语意识形态;(ii)语言和社会意义之间存在不确定性,这种不确定性因第二语言和传统西班牙语听众生活经验的差异而有所不同。在先前关于语言变体和意义之间不确定性的发现的基础上,当前的研究表明,这也适用于(隐含的)语言变体,证明了语言意识形态在调节社会感知方面的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Languages
Languages Arts and Humanities-Language and Linguistics
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
22.20%
发文量
282
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊最新文献
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