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Embodying “tech”: Articulatory setting, phonetic variation, and social meaning
Author(s) -
Pratt Teresa
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of sociolinguistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1467-9841
pISSN - 1360-6441
DOI - 10.1111/josl.12369
Subject(s) - indexicality , sociology , variation (astronomy) , style (visual arts) , context (archaeology) , ethnography , persona , linguistics , the arts , meaning (existential) , ideology , psychology , visual arts , humanities , history , anthropology , art , political science , philosophy , physics , archaeology , politics , astrophysics , law , psychotherapist
This article examines the co‐occurring realization of two sociophonetic variables within a style—the LOT vowel in English and word‐initial /l/—to explore the link between articulatory setting and stylistic practice. At an arts‐focused high school in the San Francisco Bay Area, the curricular and social practices of students in the technical theatre department centre around manual labour. Ethnographic analysis demonstrates that “tech” constitutes a locally enregistered persona, informed by tech students’ positioning as working‐class subjects through their bodily, sartorial, and technological practices. Tech students also produce higher and more rounded variants of LOT , and more velarized productions of /l/, than their non‐tech peers, and I suggest that articulatory setting is at play in the cohesive indexicality of these variants. I advocate for the continued exploration of co‐occurring sociolinguistic variables which treat the body as a broader stylistic context, and propose that studies of co‐occurring features focus on the ideological processes by which combinations of variables come to index thematic styles.

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