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Language, Class, and Identity: Teenagers Fashioning Themselves Through Language

โœ Scribed by James Paul Gee; Anna-Ruth Allen; Katherine Clinton


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
122 KB
Volume
12
Category
Article
ISSN
0898-5898

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โœฆ Synopsis


This article uses discourse analysis to study how teenagers from different social classes in the United States use language to fashion themselves as different kinds of people.'' Our analyses lead us to the following conclusions: The working class teens (in these interviews) use language to fashion their identities in a way that is closely attached to a world of social and dialogic interaction. The upper middle class teens (in these interviews) use language to construct their identities in a way that detaches itself from everyday'' social interaction and orients more towards their personal biographical trajectories through an achievement space'' defined by the (deeply aligned) norms of their families, schools, and powerful institutions in our society. In addition, the upper middle class teens use the abstract language of rational argumentation to cloak'' (of ``defer'') their quite personal interests and fears, while the working class teens use a personalized narrative (i.e., story-based) language to encode their values, interests, and themes.


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