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Presented By: Department of Linguistics

Colloquium: "Rethinking Race and Place and its Role in Achieving Social Justice in Linguistics" (virtual)

Sharese King, Assistant Professor, University of Chicago

Sharese King Sharese King
Sharese King
The Linguistics Department colloquium series begins Friday, September 25, with a virtual talk by Sharese King, Assistant Professor in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Chicago. Dr. King will present "Rethinking Race and Place and its Role in Achieving Social Justice in Linguistics."

Dr. King is a sociolinguist interested in the relationship between race, place, and language variation. She explores how African Americans use language to construct multidimensional identities and how these constructions are perceived and evaluated across different listener populations. Drawing on both ethnographic and experimental techniques, her work explores both the linguistic construction of race and the ways in which language is racialized.

ABSTRACT

Recent explorations of regional variation across African American speech communities have brought to the forefront the linguistic heterogeneity across African American Language (AAL). Having problematized the presentation of AAL as a uniform variety (Wolfram 2007; 2015), intra-group analyses highlight the diverse social and linguistic constructions among African American speakers. In this talk, I zoom in on three personae local to the African American community in Rochester, New York, contextualizing each style against the backdrop of a post-industrial city in the Rustbelt region. I investigate how the three personae, The Mobile Professional, The Hood Kid, and The Biker recruit or reject vocalic patterns of the Northern Cities Shift, as well as to construct identities relevant to their social landscape. The findings challenge how we define the dialect, while also complicating our understanding of the relationship between race, identity, and language. Further, this work imagines more ways to enact social justice in the study of variationism by expanding our representation of African Americans' multidimensional identities.
Sharese King Sharese King
Sharese King

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