This book provides a critical overview of sociophonetic research and considers how the findings of this field illuminate and problematize a range of central issues in phonetics and phonology. The core argument of the volume is that research carried out under the aegis of sociophonetics is uniquely positioned to address core questions in phonetic and phonological theory; to raise new questions for research; to improve theories of how the sounds of language are represented, structured, produced, and perceived; and to discern the relationship between the linguistic system and the social context in which speech production and perception occur. The chapters address three key areas of impact for sociophonetic research - linguistic structure, the relationships between perception, production, and social representations, and language change - and outline further opportunities for interdisciplinary synergy. The book will appeal to researchers interested in questions surrounding phonological and phonetic representations and processes, and to scholars whose focus is the social patterning of phonetic variation; it also provides valuable suggestions for the design of future studies and the re-analysis of existing data.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- 1: Jennifer Nycz and Lauren Hall-Lew: Sociophonetics: Opportunities for phonology and phonetics
- 2: Jennifer Nycz: Contrast and representations
- 3: Meredith Tamminga: Extragrammatical factors and the locus of sociophonetic variation
- 4: Kevin B. McGowan: Toward an ecologically valid theory of speech perception
- 5: Abby Walker: The relationship between production and perception
- 6: Lauren Hall-Lew: Sound change
- 7: Teresa Pratt: Adolescent linguistic practice as teen years acquisition
- 8: Lauren Hall-Lew and Jennifer Nycz: Further interdisciplinary opportunities: Intraspeaker variation