Language use as a carrier of social identity |
Author(s):
, ,Journal/Book: Int J Intercult Relat. 1999; 23: the Boulevard Langford Lane, Kidlington, Oxford Ox5 1GB, England. Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd. 281-296.
Abstract: In the present study, we examined the relationship of social identity (Hongkonger or Chinese) and rite attitudes toward bilingual code switching in a conversation between a Hong Kong person and a Chinese Mainlander. Students from a local university in Hong Kong (N = 159) listened to a four-turn conversation between a Hong Kong person and a Mainlander in a wedding party. As expected, when the speaker converged to rite Putonghua (the Mainland official language), those who claimed a Hongkonger identity judged the Hong Kong speaker less favourably; than did those who claimed a Chinese identity. In addition, participants who claimed a Chinese identity judged the Hong Kong speaker more favourably when he converged to Putonghua than when he maintained Cantonese (a Chinese dialect most commonly used in Hong Kong). Finally, social identity was unrelated to language attitudes when the Mainland speaker converged to Cantonese first.
Note: Article Hong YY, Hong Kong Univ Sci & Technol, Div Social Sci, Clear Water Bay, HONG KONG
Keyword(s): ETHNIC IDENTITY; ATTITUDES; DIMENSIONS; VITALITY; EXAMPLE
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