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Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

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Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford
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Page 1: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Fourth section

Tyler SchnoebelenQuestions?

Tylers at stanford

Page 2: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Agenda

• Ochs and Taylor (1995)• Mid-term review– Send me questions in e-mail and I’ll compile ‘em

for everyone– There are no stupid questions– And even if there are, I’ll keep the questions

anonymous, so no one will know

Page 3: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

What’s the point?

Page 4: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Methods

• Dinner conversations for 7 middle-class white families (1987-1989)– One 5 y/o, one older sibling minimum– 100 past-time narratives for this study– Conversational analysis– Definition of roles (protagonist, introducer,

recipient, etc)

Page 5: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Power and gender

• “In the family context, issues of gender and power cannot be looked at as simply dyadic, i.e., men versus women as haves versus havenots.” (Ochs and Taylor 1995)

• “Gender is not an individual matter at all, but a collaborative affair that connects the individual to the social order.” (Eckert and McConnell-Ginet 2003: 31)

Page 6: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

“Problematize”

• An ugly word, a useful idea• When someone renders an action, condition,

thought, or feeling as problematic (or possibly problematic)

• Some ways to problematize:– Question the truth, credibility; throw doubt on the

situation– Point out negatives (it’s thoughtless, dangerous)– Suggest incompetence, lack of self-control– “Unfair, rude, excessive”

Page 7: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Stages

• Stage one– Mothers introduce narrative– A locus of power!

• Stage two– Ah, but how ephemeral—fathers get a platform for

monitoring and judging

• Stage three– Mothers strive to reclaim control– But this is a cycle

Page 8: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Why do mothers bother?

Page 9: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Midterm review

Page 10: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Your questions, first and foremost

Page 11: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Some questions

• If you want to build a model of “meaning making”, what sorts of things do you need to include?

• Why is gossip in a section about meaning making?• How do various authors use the metaphor of “the

market”?• Does it matter whether you use a masculine

pronoun for generic situations? Why or why not?

Page 12: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

New takes on old words• Desire• Negotiation/construction/production• Labels• Stereotypes• Sex/gender• Institutions• Legibility• Iterability• Discursive• Face• Context

Page 13: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

New-ish words and phrases • Heteronormativity• Indexicality• Imagined communities• Hall of mirrors• Heterosexual market• Gender binary• Gender order• Essentialism• Variation• Social practice• Communicative competence• Intersubjectivity• Interlocutor• Recursiveness

Page 14: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Compare and contrast

• Queer Theory and Radical Feminism• The discourse turn, the performance turn • Interpretations of Lakoff (1972)• Difference vs. dominance• Prescriptivism vs. descriptivism• Speech community, community of practice,

network• Back-channels vs. interruptions

Page 15: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Nested terms

• Speech activities (situations, activities, events, acts)– Types of speech acts (performative)

• Conversation roles• Linguistic disciplines– Especially sociolinguistics

Page 16: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Beyond the classroom

• Hold on to your wallet when people use these words:– Neutral– Natural– Common sense– Objective

Page 17: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Beyond the classroom II

• Pay attention to where things come from– How is meaning getting made? By whom?– It can be useful to be a problematizer; it can be

useful to recognize problematizing from others

Page 18: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Beyond the classroom III

• When reading about gender differences (or differences between any social categories), watch out for monolithic statements– What about differences among women, for

example– When do differences within each group outweigh

differences between groups– How can you detect a “hall of mirrors”?

Page 19: Fourth section Tyler Schnoebelen Questions? Tylers at stanford.

Beyond the classroom IV

• “Frames” are a really useful concept—we’ll talk more about these after the mid-term.– See Eckert & McConnell-Ginet 2003: 105


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