ANTH 304 –
LANGUAGE, GENDER AND SEXUAL IDENTITIES
Professor: Valentina
Pagliai
Oberlin College
MWF 1:30-2:20pm
Office: King 320a
Phone: (440) 775-8372
office
Office Hours: MF
4:30-5:30pm
(Or by appointment)
E-mail:
valentina.pagliai@oberlin.edu
Course Description: Do women and men speak
different languages? Are they
really from different planets? Or is it just a question of differential
power? Is patriarchal dominance
reinforced and maintained through sexist language? If so, can we change language to
make it less sexist? Do
³women² and ³men² actually exist?
How do we construct them through the way we speak? It is
possible to pull apart the effects of gender from those of class, race,
ethnicity, age, sexuality, and other aspects of identity? These are some of the questions
raised by the study of gender and language in the past few decades. By considering some of these debates,
students will explore how both language and gender are grounded in structures
of power, authority, and social inequality. We will
also examine the construction of sexual identities in conversation, including
topics such as language use in the gay/lesbian communities, the discursive
construction of masculinity, etc. The
course will have a discussion-oriented format and students will conduct their
own research on the topics addressed in class.
Course Goals: It is important to me
that students understand this as a field of studies in the making, and that
they are part of this ³making,² that they are contributing to it. I want them to see how different
scholars have brought different theories, methods and points of view to the
study of gender and language, and how these differences lead to a complex and
continuously changing field. Thus, while the readings
will provide a large enough coverage of main issues and problems that have been
raised over thirty years of studies, the ³research practica² should allow the
students to actually see for themselves when and how such studies are
applicable to their own experience.
The research practica will be particularly useful for the more advanced
students, who can carry them out using methods of data gathering and
transcription learned in previous linguistic courses. However, the research practica will be kept flexible and
various enough to accommodate less experienced students. An important goal for me is to have the
students raise new questions about what they read, entering in a dialogue with
the authors of the readings.
Hence, I privilege discussion and the sharing of ideas in a cooperative
and dialectic environment.
Required Texts:
1) Jennifer Coates 1998 Language and Gender:
A Reader.
Oxford: Blackwell Publishing. (LGR)
2) Additional Readings: Copies
of the course's additional readings are going to be found on Blackboard or in
print reserve in the campus Library.
Some readings may be available online through particular journals or
databases. Specific information
will be given when needed.
Optional Texts:
1) Kira Hall & Mary Bucholtz 1995 Gender
Articulated: Language and the Socially Constructed Self. New York and London: Routledge.
2) Jennifer Coates 1993 Women, Men
and Language. London: Longman.
Note: All Readings and Assignments are to be done by
the date they are listed on the syllabus.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 1
M 2/6 --.Introduction: What is gender? What
is language? Why study their relationship?
W 2/8 – Do men and women speak
differently? Where does this difference lay? Why are they different? What are the consequences?
Readings: - Robin Lakoff 1975 ³Language
and Womanıs place² in Language in Society (45-80).
F 2/10
-- Are women more polite than men, or not? Why?
Readings: - Penelope Brown 1998 ³How and
Why are Women More Polite: Some Evidence from a Mayan Community² in LGR pp.
81-98.
-
Janet Holmes 1998 ³Complimenting – A Positive Politeness Strategy² in LGR
pp. 100-118.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 2
M 2/13
-- Are women linguistically conservative or innovative? Do they speak
more standard language?
Readings: - Peter Trudgill 1998 ³Sex and
Covert Prestige² in LGR pp. 21-27.
-
Patricia Nichols 1998 ³Black Women in the Rural South: Conservative and
Innovative² LGR pp. 55-62.
-
Susan Gal 1978 ³Peasant Men Canıt Get Wives: Language Change and Sex Roles in a
Bilingual Community² Language in Society: 7, 1-16. In LGR pp. 147-158.
Optional
readings:
-
Patricia Nichols 1983 ³Linguistic Options and Choices for Black Women in the
Rural South² in Thorne, Kramarae & Henley (Eds.) Language, Gender and
Society. Cambridge: Newbury House Publishers.
Pp. 54-66.
W 2/15 – Comparative evidence from
other cultures/societies: what does it teach us?
Readings: - Keenan, Elinor 1974 ³Norm-Makers, Norm-Breakers: Uses of
Speech by Men and Women in a Malagasy Community.² In R. Bauman & J Sherzer
(Eds.) Explorations in the Ethnography of Speaking. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press. Pp. 125-143.
-
Bambi Schieffelin 1987 ³Do different worlds mean different words? An example
from Papua New Guinea² in Philips, Steele and Tanz (Eds.) Language, Gender
and Sex in Comparative Perspective.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. 249-260.
1st
Summary/reflections Due on the readings done so far
F 2/17 – Class discussion of 1st
research practicum: Do men swear more than women?
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 3
M 2/20 – Can language be sexist? Is
sexist language reinforcing sexism in society?
Readings: - Wendy Martyna 1983 ³Beyond
the He/Man Approach: The Case for Non-Sexist Language² in Thorne, Kramarae
& Henley (Eds.) Language, Gender and Society. Cambridge: Newbury House Publishers
(available in print reserve) pp. 25-35. OR USE Nancy Henley 1987 ³This
New Species that Seeks a New Language: On Sexism in Language and Language Change²
in Penfield (Ed.) Women and Language in Transition. Albany: State of New York
University Press. Pp. 3-23.
(Available in print reserve)
W 2/22 – How can we diminish or
eliminate sexism in language?
Readings: - Alleen Pace Nilsen 1987
³Guidelines Against Sexist Language: a Case History² and the Appendix
³Guidelines for Nonsexist Use of Language in NCTE Publications (Revised 1985)²
in Penfield pp. 37-52 & pp. 54-63. (Available in print reserve)
-
Barbara Withers 1987 ³Resources for Liberating the Curriculum² in Penfield pp.
65-71.
-
Nan Van Den Bergh 1987 ³Renaming: Vehicle for Empowerment² in Penfield pp.
130-135. (Available in print reserve)
2nd Summary/reflections Due on the
readings done up to today included
F 2/24 – Sexist language continued.
Selection
and discussion of your personal research projects.
Deadline to select a topic for your personal
research and final paper
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 4
M 2/27 – Class discussion of 2nd
research practicum: Create a Sexist Language Rating Scale!
W 3/1 – Woman language or powerless
language? Are men reinforcing their power over women through the way cross-sex
interactions take shape? The articulation of the dominance paradigm.
Readings: - William OıBarr and B. Atkins
1998 ³Womenıs Language or Powerless Language?² in LGR pp. 377-386.
-
Candace West and Don Zimmerman 1983 ³Small Insults: A Study of Interruptions in
Cross-Sex Conversations between Unacquainted Persons² in Thorne, Kramarae &
Henley (Eds.) Language, Gender and Society.
Cambridge: Newbury House Publishers pp. 102-115.
F 3/3 – How
women get to be oppressed by men through their role in interaction.
Readings: - Fishman ³Interaction: the
Work Women Do² in Thorne, Kramarae and Henley pp. 89-101.
-
Susan Herring et al. 1998 ³Participation in Electronic Discourse in a Feminist
Field² LGR pp. 197-208.
-
Victoria Leto de Francisco 1998 ³The Sounds of Silence: How Men Silence Women
in Marital Relations² in LGR pp. 176-182.
-
Norma Mendoza-Denton 1995 ³Pregnant Pauses: Silence and Authority in the Anita
Hill-Clarence Thomas Hearings² in Kira Hall & Mary Bucholtz 1995 Gender
Articulated: Language and the Socially Constructed Self. New York and London:
Routledge. pp. 51-65.
Optional readings:
-
Susan Herring etc. 1995 ³This discussion is going too far!: Male resistance to
female participation on the Internet² in Kira Hall & Mary Bucholtz 1995 Gender
Articulated: Language and the Socially Constructed Self. New York and London:
Routledge. Pp. 67-94.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK
5
M
3/6 – Do women and men belong to different cultures (and thus speak not
the same language, but different languages)? Is this the cause of misunderstandings among the sexes? The
difference paradigm.
Readings:
- Daniel Maltz & Ruth Bonker 1998 ³A Cultural Approach to Male-Female
Miscommunication² in LGR pp. 417-432.
W
3/8 – Are men and women just not understanding each other?
Readings:
- Deborah Tannen 1990 ³Put Down that Paper and Talk to Me!: Rapport Talk and
Report Talk² in: You just donıt understand: Women and men in conversation. New York: William Morrow and Co. Pp.
74-95. (Book available in print reserve)
-
Senta Troemel-Ploetz 1998 ³Selling the Apolitical² in LGR pp. 446-457.
3rd
Summary/reflections Due on the readings done so far
F 3/10 – Class discussion of 3rd
research practicum: Cross-sex participation to Internet discussions today.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 6
M 3/13 – How do children learn to speak
differently according to their sex? The studies on socialization of gendered
language.
Readings: - Jean Berko-Gleason 1987 ³Sex
differences in parent-child interaction² in Philips etc. pp. 189-199. 11
- Joan Swann 1998 ³Talk Control: An illustration
for the classroom of problems in analyzing male dominance of conversation² in
LGR pp. 185-195. 11
Optional readings: - Jean Berko Gleason
and E. Blank Greif 1983 ³Menıs speech to young children² in Thorne, Kramarae
& Henley (Eds.) Language, Gender and Society. Cambridge: Newbury House Publishers.
Pp. 140-149.
W 3/15 – How do children develop
different participation structures in interaction? Is it true that women are
more cooperative than males? Are they less interested in matters of right and
wrong?
Readings:
- M. H. Goodwin & C. Goodwin 1987 ³Childrenıs arguing² in Phillips etc. pp.
200-248.
F 3/17 – Do girls use language for
cooperation? Or to build hierarchies?
Readings: - M. H. Goodwin 1999
³Constructing Opposition within Girlsı Games² in Bucholtz etc. pp. 388-405.
4th Summary/reflections Due on the
readings done so far
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 7
M
3/20 – Class discussion of 4th research practicum: A walk in
the world of child rearing. Can you find evidence of different rearing
practices leading to different gendered communicative behaviors. Also: What
happens in high school?
W 3/22 – Problematization of gender
categories: Gender as displayed, as constructed identity:
Readings: - Kira Hall ³Lip Service on the
Fantasy Line² 1995. In Kira Hall & Mary Bucholtz 1995 Gender
Articulated: Language and the Socially Constructed Self. New York and London:
Routledge. Pp.183-213.
F 3/24 – Problematizing
categories of ³woman² and ³man²: If gender is constructed, how do we do it?
How do we perform being ³men² or ³women²? How is heterosexuality constructed
and communicated?
Readings: - Caton 1990 ³The poetic
construction of Self² In Peaks of Yemen I summon pp. 109-126.
- Deborah Cameron 1998 ³Performing gender
identity: Young menıs talk and the construction of heterosexual masculinity² in
LGR pp. 270-283.
- Scott Kiesling 2002 ³Playing the straight man:
displaying and maintaining male heterosexuality in discourse.² In Language and
Sexuality, pp. 249-266.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 8
- FALL BREAK
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 9
M 4/3 –Is there particular linguistic
forms that are used exclusively to represent gender?
Readings:
- Ochs, E. 1992. ³Indexing Gender.² In A.
Duranti & C. Goodwin (eds.) Rethinking Context. Language as an
Interactive Phenomenon. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. pp. 336-355.
- Sara Trechter 1999 ³Contextualizing the exotic
few: gender dichotomies in Lakota² in Bucholtz etc. pp. 101-117.
W 4/5 – Class discussion of 5th
research practicum: Analysis of gender displays (With transcription).
F
4/7 – NO CLASS
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 10
M 4/10 – How
do we take into account racial, social class, cultural differences in language
vis-à-vis gender distinctions?
Readings: - Marcy Morgan 1999 ³No Woman
No Cry: Claiming African American Womenıs Place² in Bucholtz etc. pp. 27- 42.
- Keith Walters 1999 ³Opening the Doors of
Paradise a Cubit: Educated Tunisian Women, Embodied Linguistic Practice, and
Theories of Language² in Bucholtz etc. pp. 200-215.
5th
Summary/reflections Due on the readings done so far
W 4/12 – Do gay/lesbian people speak
differently from heterosexuals?
Readings: - Rudolph Gaudio 1994. ³Properties in the Speech of Gay and
Straight Men.² American Speech, 69:30-57.
- Robin Queen 1997 ³In Donıt Speak Spritch:
Locating Lesbian Language² in Livia etc. pp. 233-255.
F 4/14 – What can we learn from
comparative studies of GLBT language?
Readings: - Rudolph Gaudio 1997 ³Not
Talking Straight in Hausa² in Livia etc. pp. 416-428.
-
Tom Boellstorff 2004 ³Authentic of Course!: Gay Language in Indonesia and
Cultures of Belonging² In Leap & Boellstorff (Eds.) Speaking in Queer
Tongues: Globalizationa and Gay Language. Urbana & Chicago: University of Illinois
Press.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 11
M 4/17 – What can we learn from
comparative studies of GLBT language?
Readings:
- Kira Hall 1997 ³Go Suck Your Husband Sugarcane² In Livia and Hall pp.
430-457.
W 4/19 – Queer studies turn:
Deconstructing sex.
Readings: - Ian Lucas 1997 ³The Color of
His eyes: Polari and the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence² in Livia etc. pp.
85-93.
- Rusty Barrett 1997 ³The Homo-Genious Speech
Community² in Livia etc. pp. 181-198. 18
F 4/21 – Class discussion of 6th
research practicum: topic open.
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 12
M 4/24 – Can we perform more than one
gender? The multiplication of ways of doing being female or male: subaltern and
hegemonic masculinities/femininities.
Draft of Final Project Due on Blackboard
Readings: - Jennifer Coates 1998 ³Thanks
God Iım a woman: the construction of differing femininities² in Cameron pp.
295-320.
W 4/26 – The multiplication of ways of
doing being female or male: subaltern and hegemonic masculinities/femininities.
Readings: - Bonnie McElhinny 1995
³Challenging Hegemonic masculinities² female and male police officers handling
domestic violence² in Kira Hall & Mary Bucholtz 1995 Gender Articulated:
Language and the Socially Constructed Self. New York and London: Routledge. Pp.
217-240.
6th
Summary/reflections Due on the readings done so far
Optional readings: - Bonnie McElhinny
1998 ³I Donıt Smile Much Anymore: Affect, Gender and Discourse of Pittsburgh
Police Officers² in LGR pp. 309-325.
F 4/28 -- Class discussion of 7th
research practicum: participant observation, recording and transcription: doing
being a ³woman² ³men² ³heterosexual² ³homosexual² is not done in the same way
by everybody. What are some of the
differences that you can see?
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 13
M 5/1 – Why do we believe than men and
women talk in particular ways? When we find differences, are they really there
or are we just being influenced by our own linguistic ideologies? Where do
these linguistic ideologies come from?
Readings: - Inoue, 2002, ³Gender and
Linguistic Modernity: Towards an Effective History of Japanese Womenıs Language.²
American ethnologist 29 (2) :392-422.
W
5/3 – Linguistic ideologies of gendered language: continued. How does
what counts as female/male language change through time?
Readings: - Norma Mendoza-Denton ³Muy
Macha: Gender and Ideology in Gangıs Girls Discourse about Makeup² Ethos:
Journal of anthropology, 61:47-63.
-
Briggs 1992 ³Since I Am a Woman I Will Chastise My Relatives² American Ethnologist 19:337-361.
- Shigeko Okamoto 1995 ³ Tastelessı Japanese:
Less Feminineı Speech among Young Japanese Women² in Kira Hall & Mary
Bucholtz 1995 Gender Articulated: Language and the Socially Constructed Self. New York and London:
Routledge. Pp. 297-321.
7th
Summary/reflections Due on the readings done so far
F 5/5 – What questions are we asking
today? Which of the old paradigms
are still producing research? How has research changed?
____________________________________________________________
WEEK 14
M 5/8 – Open Discussion of Studentsı
final projects.
W 5/10 – Open Discussion of Studentsı
final projects.
F
5/12 – NO CLASS
____________________________________________________________
FINALS' WEEK
Final Paper
Due: Wednesday May 17, 9am
Course
Policies:
Code of honor
The
Oberlin College Students' Code of Honor applies to the course, please
familiarize yourself with it: http://www.oberlin.edu/students/student_pages/honor_code.html
Readings should be completed by
the day they are listed on the syllabus; this will help you follow lectures and
prepare for lectures and section.
Summaries/reflections are due at the
beginning of the class session.
They must touch on all the readings done. They must be typed. They will
be graded down 1 point for each day that they are late. Each summary is graded
on a scale of 1 to 10 and it is worth 5% of the final grade.
Research Practica All students will be
required to participate in the first 2 research practica. Then each student/group will
participate in 2 additional research practica, depending on their final
research project. All the results
will be presented and discussed in class at the appointed times. Each research
practicum will be worth 5% of the final grade.
Research Project and Final Paper: Two of your practica,
your presentation to the class and your final paper will be based on an
independent research project that you will carry on during the semester. You can do it alone or in a pair
together with another student. The project will have to use one (or more) of
the following methods: Conversation Analysis, Discourse Analysis, any kind of
structural linguistics analysis (phonemic, morphemic, etc.), analysis of
metaphors (Lakoffıs style). If you
are not trained in any of these methods, donıt worry, you will be taught how to
use them during the course.
Participation
to class Discussions is fundamental. Everybody is expected to
participate actively to class discussion every time the class meets and as time
allows. ³Active participation,² means speaking during discussions (at least
most of the time), having questions prepared for potential discussion for every
class, and getting to know your fellow classmates by name, major, etc. Merely
attending class does not constitute active in class participation.
Presence in class is expected, and I will
take the roll at the beginning of each class. Students present at the roll will
receive 1 point. Students who are
late may not be recorded and will receive half point.
Grades:
Summaries 35%
of the grade
Research Practica 20
%
Presentation to class 10%
Final paper 15
%
Presence in class and Participation 20
%
_________
100
%
A+ = 96% of grade; A = 93%; A- = 90%, B+ = 86%;
B = 82%; B- = 78%; C+ = 74%; C = 70%; C- = 60%; NE = Less than 60%; D = 55%; F
= Less than 55%.
Final Note: Although the syllabus
will be followed as much as possible, it is intended as a guideline and
circumstances may require a change to the schedule. Students are responsible for any changes announced in class.