犹太英语语调中的宏观节奏感

IF 1 4区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS American Speech Pub Date : 2020-08-01 DOI:10.1215/00031283-7706542
R. Burdin
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引用次数: 3

摘要

本文调查了语调在Sarah Bunin Benor所称的美国犹太英语曲目中的位置,这是一组说话者可以用来索引犹太人身份的特征。一项感知实验的结果显示,听众将语调轮廓与犹太性联系在一起的变化。犹太听众,尤其是那些与讲意第绪语的人有联系的听众,会从语音上明显的上升-下降来表明犹太性;然而,非犹太听众听到的是一组不同的轮廓——发音不太明显的上升-下降和上升——听起来像犹太人。作者提出,被认为是“犹太人”有一个统一的特征:特别是,更宏观的节奏轮廓(高音和低音有规律的交替)被认为是更多的犹太人。对于讲犹太语的人来说,只有具有最大程度宏观节奏的轮廓(具有更高峰值的上升-下降)才被认为是犹太人;对于非犹太人来说,较低程度的宏观节奏就足够了。因此,语调的表现很像声音系统的其他部分,因为特定语言特征的社会意义高度依赖于个人的语言和社会历史。
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The Perception of Macro-rhythm in Jewish English Intonation
This article investigates intonation’s place in what Sarah Bunin Benor calls the American Jewish English repertoire, a collection of features that speakers can use to index Jewish identity. Results from a perceptual experiment show variation in which intonational contours listeners associate with Jewishness. Jewish listeners, particularly those with connections with Yiddish speakers, pick out a phonetically distinct rise-fall as indicating Jewishness; however, non-Jewish listeners hear a different set of contours—a less phonetically distinct rise-fall and a rise—as sounding Jewish. The author proposes that there is a unifying feature being perceived as “Jewish”: specifically, more macro-rhythmic contours (with regular alternations of high and low pitch) are heard as more Jewish. For Jewish speakers, only the contour with the greatest degree of macro-rhythm (the rise-fall with higher peaks) is heard as Jewish; for non-Jewish speakers, a lower degree of macro-rhythm suffices. Intonation thus behaves much like other parts of the sound system in that the social meaning of a particular linguistic feature is highly dependent on an individual’s linguistic and social history.
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来源期刊
American Speech
American Speech Multiple-
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: American Speech has been one of the foremost publications in its field since its founding in 1925. The journal is concerned principally with the English language in the Western Hemisphere, although articles dealing with English in other parts of the world, the influence of other languages by or on English, and linguistic theory are also published. The journal is not committed to any particular theoretical framework, and issues often contain contributions that appeal to a readership wider than the linguistic studies community. Regular features include a book review section and a “Miscellany” section devoted to brief essays and notes.
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