作为地理符号学组合的广州非洲城:连接多语言、商店标志和时空

IF 2.1 2区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS Applied Linguistics Review Pub Date : 2023-09-12 DOI:10.1515/applirev-2022-0204
Xia Chao, Hao Wang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本参与式民族志案例研究运用地理符号学组合和时间符号的社会空间概念,探讨了广州非洲城的商店标志与跨国非洲移民的意义制造和场所制造实践的交集。数据收集采用传统和参与式人种学方法相结合,包括视觉文本、访谈和带实地笔记的虚拟实地观察。研究结果表明,非洲城是地理符号的集合,这与人文地理学的原则相呼应,即物质和社会环境在日常实践中充满了意义。非洲城作为地理符号学的集合是一个多方面的对话过程,在这个过程中,意义、感知、多重感官和符号与一个地方联系在一起。本研究表明,非洲移民对非洲城的认知受到物质环境和社会环境的双重调节。具体来说,非洲移民能够与非人类人工制品和人类一起参与多语言的社会实践,在他们对非洲城的重新概念化中非常强调空间性,而不仅仅是当地非洲移民的中心。本研究进一步表明,在非洲移民千禧年中聚集的材料是历史的、社会的、文化的和多语言的,有助于他们重建非洲城的跨国空间和非洲移民的身份。本研究认为,地理符号学组合方法通过在意义制造和地点制造实践中突出物质性,在扩展当前对多语言和跨国研究的理解方面具有突出意义。
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Africatown in Guangzhou as geosemiotic assemblage: connecting multilingualism, store signs, and chronotopes
Abstract Using the social-spatial notions of geosemiotic assemblage and chronotope, this participatory ethnographic case study examines the intersection of store signs in the Africatown in Guangzhou and transnational African migrants’ meaning-making and place-making practices. Data collection is employed through a combination of traditional and participatory ethnographic methods including visual texts, interviews, and virtual field observations with fieldnotes. Findings from this study indicate the Africatown as geosemiotic assemblage, which echoes the principle in human geography that material and social environments are imbued with meanings in daily practices. The Africatown as geosemiotic assemblage is a multifaceted and dialogic process in which meanings, perceptions, multi-senses, and symbols are tied together to a locality. This study illustrates that the African migrants’ perceptions of the Africatown are mediated by both material and social environments. Specifically, African migrants are able to engage in multilingual social practices with both non-human artefacts and humans, placing great emphasis on spatiality in their reconceptualization of Africatown as more than a local African migrants’ hub. This study further demonstrates that the materials assembled in the African migrants’ milleu are historical, social, cultural, and multilingual in facilitating their reconstruction of the Africatown’s transnational space and African migrants’ identities. This study argues that a geosemiotic assemblage approach is salient in expanding current understandings of multilingual and transnational research by foregrounding materiality in meaning-making and place-making practices.
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CiteScore
4.20
自引率
7.70%
发文量
81
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