Thirty-year retrospective on language, gender and sexuality research

IF 0.9 2区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS Gender and Language Pub Date : 2021-12-23 DOI:10.1558/genl.21540
Kira Hall,Rodrigo Borba,Mie Hiramoto
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Abstract

This thirty-year retrospective on language, gender and sexuality research, launched in anticipation of the thirtieth anniversary of the 1992 Berkeley Women and Language Conference, showcases essays by luminaries who presented papers at the conference as well as allied scholars who have taken the field in new directions. Revitalising a tradition set out by the First Berkeley Women and Language Conference in 1985, the four biennial Berkeley conferences held in the 1990s led to the establishment of the International Gender and Language Association and subsequently of the journal Gender and Language, contributing to the field’s institutionalisation and its current panglobal character. Retrospective essays addressing the themes of Politics, Practice, Intersectionality and Place will be published across four issues of the journal in 2021. The final issue of our thirty-year retrospective shows how studies of language, gender and sexuality may be enlivened by seriously engaging with the notion of place – understood as one’s geographical location, locus of enunciation and/or position within the field. Bonnie S. McElhinny and María Amelia Viteri scrutinise lingering effects of colonialism and advocate for hope as a central affective dimension of decolonial practice. Drawing upon Black feminisms, Busi Makoni discusses the embodiment of refusal to racialised forms of patriarchy and Sonja L. Lanehart underlines the importance of bringing African American Women’s Language more centrally into the field’s remit. The next three essays move their foci to specific regions: Pia Pichler reflects on the entanglement of place, race and intersectionality in the UK; Janet S. Shibamoto-Smith warns against the dangers of reifying essentialised categories in Japanese language and gender research; Fatima Sadiqi criticises the underrepresentation of North Africa in the field by reviewing the emergence and resilience of feminist linguistics in the region. The two final essays highlight the importance of sociolinguistic activism and the urgent need of moving beyond the field’s Global North emphasis. Amiena Peck discusses the power of digital activism and the way it has reignited her passion for engaged scholarship. Ana Cristina Ostermann advocates for micro-interactional analysis as a method for illuminating Southern epistemologies of gender and sexuality. The theme series also pays tribute to significant scholars present at the 1992 Berkeley conference who are no longer with us; in this issue, Rusty Barrett and Robin Queen offer a lively account of the life and work of linguist and novelist Anna Livia.
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回顾三十年的语言、性别和性研究
这本关于语言、性别和性研究的三十年回顾,是在1992年伯克利妇女与语言会议三十周年之际推出的,它展示了在会议上发表论文的杰出人物以及将该领域推向新方向的联合学者的论文。复兴了1985年第一届伯克利妇女与语言会议确立的传统,在20世纪90年代举行的四次两年一度的伯克利会议促成了国际性别与语言协会的成立,随后又促成了《性别与语言》杂志的出版,为该领域的制度化和目前的泛全球特征做出了贡献。关于政治、实践、交叉性和地点主题的回顾性论文将在2021年的四期杂志上发表。我们三十年回顾的最后一期展示了语言、性别和性的研究如何通过认真地参与地方的概念而活跃起来——被理解为一个人的地理位置、表达的地点和/或领域内的位置。Bonnie S. McElhinny和María Amelia Viteri仔细研究了殖民主义的挥之不去的影响,并提倡将希望作为非殖民实践的核心情感维度。利用黑人女权主义,Busi Makoni讨论了拒绝父权制的种族化形式的体现,Sonja L. Lanehart强调了将非裔美国女性语言更集中到该领域的重要性。接下来的三篇文章将他们的焦点转移到特定的地区:皮娅·皮切勒反思了英国的地方、种族和交叉性的纠缠;Janet S. Shibamoto-Smith对日本语言和性别研究中物化本质类别的危险提出了警告;Fatima Sadiqi通过回顾女权主义语言学在该地区的出现和恢复力,批评北非在该领域的代表性不足。最后的两篇文章强调了社会语言学行动主义的重要性,以及超越该领域的全球北方重点的迫切需要。Amiena Peck讨论了数字行动主义的力量,以及它如何重新点燃了她对从事学术研究的热情。安娜·克里斯蒂娜·奥斯特曼提倡微观互动分析作为一种方法来阐明南方的性别和性的认识论。这个主题系列还向出席1992年伯克利会议的重要学者致敬,他们已经不在我们身边;在本期节目中,拉什蒂·巴雷特和罗宾·奎恩生动地讲述了语言学家和小说家安娜·利维娅的生活和工作。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
46.20%
发文量
13
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