English_with_an_Accent_-_Rosina_Lippi-Green_UserUpload.Net

(ff) #1

Silverstein, M. (1998) Contemporary Transformations of Local Linguistic Communities. Annual
Review of Anthropology. 27: 401–426.
Silverstin, M. (2003) Indexical Order and the Dialectics of Sociolinguistic Life. Language and
Communication 23.193–229.
Smalls, D.L. (2004) Linguistic Profiling and the Law. Stanford Law and Policy Review 15: 579.
Smitherman, G. (1995) African American Women Speak Out on Anita Hill-Clarence Thomas.
Wayne State University Press.
Smitherman, G. (2000)Talkin that Talk: Language, Culture, and Education in African America.
Routledge.
Smitherman, G. (2006) Word from the Mother: Language and African Americans. New York:
Routledge.
Spears, A.K. (1998) African-American Language Use: Ideology and So-Called Obscenity. In S.
Mufwene (ed.) African-American English: Structure, History, and Use. New York: Routledge.
Spears, A.K. (2007) African American Communicative Practices: Performativity, Semantic
License and Augmentation. In H.S. Alim and J. Baugh (eds.) Talkin Black Talk: Language,
Education, and Social Change. New York: Teachers College Press, pp. 100–111.
Spolsky, B. (2002) Prospects for the Survival of the Navajo Language: A Reconsideration.
Anthropology & Education Quarterly. 33: 139–162.
Strauss, C. (2004) Cultural Standing in Expression of Opinion. Language in Society 33:161–194.
Tamura, E. (2002) African American Vernacular English and Hawai’i Creole English: A
Comparison of Two School Board Controversies. Journal of Negro Education 71(1): 17–30.
Tillery, J. and Bailey, G.(1998) Y’all in Oklahoma. American Speech. 73 3: 257–278.
Tillery, J., Wikle, T. and Bailey, G. (2000) The Nationalization of a Southernism. Journal of
English Linguistics 28(3): 280.
Umaña-Taylor, A., Vargas-Chanes, D., Garcia, C.D. and Gonzales-Backen, M. (2008) A
Longitudinal Examination of Latino Adolescents’ Ethnic Identity, Coping with Discrimination
and Self-Esteem. Journal of Early Adolescence. 28 1: 16–50.
Winford, D. (2003) Ideologies of Language and Socially Realistic Linguistics. In S. Makoni et al.
(eds.) Black Linguistics: Language, Society, and Politics in Africa and the Americas. London:
Routledge.
Wolfram, W. (1998) Language Ideology and Dialect: Understanding the Oakland Ebonics
Controversy. Journal of English Linguistics. 26 2: 108–121.
Wolfram, W. (2004) Dialect Awareness in Community Perspective. In M.C. Bender (ed.)
Linguistic Diversity in the South: Changing Codes, Practices, and Ideology. Athens, GA:
University of Georgia Press.
Wolfram, W. and Beckett, D. (2003) Language Variation in the American South: An Introduction.
American Speech. 78 2: 123–129.
Wolfram, W. and Ward, B. (2006) American Voices: How Dialects Differ from Coast to Coast.
London: Blackwell.
Yuracko, K. (2005) Trait Discrimination as Race Discrimination: An Argument About
Assimilation. The George Washington Law Review. 74: 365–438.

Free download pdf