The ethnography of speaking is concerned with describing ways of speaking, as they construct and reflect social life within particular speech communities. It is concerned further with developing cross-culturally valid concepts and theories for interpreting and explaining the interaction of language and social life. The object of study within this tradition is situated discourse: how speaking is organized and conceptualized within a given community. ‘Ethnography’ refers to fieldwork, supplemented by techniques developed in other areas of study (notably conversation analysis, history, and pragmatics), which produces a written description of the way of life of a group of people. Its focus is on the observed patterns of speaking, and the symbols and meanings, premises, and rules applied to speaking within a given community.
References
Auer, P. & A. Di Luzio
(eds.)1992The contextualization of language. John Benjamins. BoP
Basso, K.M.
1986Portraits of ‘the Whiteman’. Cambridge University Press.
Blum-Kulka, S.
1990You don’t touch lettuce with your fingers. Journal of Pragmatics 14: 259–288. BoP
1989Fifty terms for talk. In S. Ting-Toomey & F. Korzenny (eds.) Language, communication and culture: 93–120. Sage.
Carey, J.
1989Communication as culture. Unwin Hyman.
Clifford, J. & G. Marcus
1986Writing culture. University of California Press.
Duranti, A. & C. Goodwin
(eds.)1992Rethinking context. Cambridge University Press. BoP
Fitch, K.
1990/91A ritual for attempting leave-taking in Colombia. Research on Language and Social Interaction 24: 209–224.
Hall, S.
1980Cultural studies. Media, Culture, and Society 2: 57–72. BoP
Huspek, M.
1986Linguistic variation, context, and meaning. Language in Society 15: 149–163. BoP
Hymes, D.
1962The ethnography of speaking. In Anthropology and human behavior: 15–53. Anthropological Society of Washington. BoP
Hymes, D.
1972Models of the interaction of language and social life. In J. Gumperz & D. Hymes (eds.) Directions in sociolinguistics: 35–71. Holt, Rinehart and Winston. BoP
Hymes, D.
1974Foundations in sociolinguistics. University of Pennsylvania Press. BoP
Katriel, T.
1986Talking straight. Cambridge University Press. BoP
Katriel, T.
1991Communal webs. State University of New York Press.
Katriel, T. & G. Philipsen
1981‘What we need is communication’: ‘Communication’ as a cultural category in some American speech. Communication Monographs 48: 301–317.
Kondo, D.
1990Crafting selves. University of Chicago Press.
Mandelbaum, J.
1990/91Beyond mundane reason. Research on Language and Social Interaction 24: 333–350. BoP
Moerman, M.
1988Talking culture. University of Pennsylvania Press. BoP
Murray, S.
1983Group formation in social science. Linguistic Research, Inc. BoP
Philipsen, G.
1992Speaking culturally. State University of New York Press.
Rosaldo, M.Z.
1982The things we do with words. Language in Society 11: 203–237.
Schegloff, E.
1987Between macro and micro. In J. Alexander , B. Giesen & R. Munch , & N. Smelser (eds.) The micro-macro link: 207–234. University of California Press.
Searle, J.R.
1975Indirect speech acts. In P. Cole & J.L. Morgan , (eds.) Syntax and semantics, vol. 3: 59–82. Academic Press.
Tobin, J. & D. Wu & D. Davidson
1989Preschool in three cultures. Yale University Press.
Verschueren, J.
1989Language on language. IPrA Papers in Pragmatics 3: 5–144. BoP
Willis, P.
1977Learning to labour. Columbia University Press.