553 research outputs found
Online-offline modes of identity and community : Elliot Rodger's twisted world of masculine victimhood
An investigation into the online-offline backgrounds of the worldview of a mass murderer, with special attention to the Manospher
Foreword
Family language policy can be seen as a form of sociolinguistic biopower, inspired not by the "raison d'Ă©tat" but by a "raison de famille"
Pierre Bourdieu and language in society
This paper argues that Bourdieuâs oeuvre presents a radically new set of images on man and society in which language, as object and practice, assumes a key role. Three aspects of Bourdieuâs work are highlighted: (1) Bourdieuâs New Left-inspired search for a âsocialized humanityâ and his related interest in American symbolic interactionism; (2) the particular âmethodological loopâ he constructed in his work, in which ethnographic insight was used as the foundation for statistical work, which in turn yielded new ethnographic issues; (3) the development of ânexus conceptsâ such as habitus, in which the traditional âmicro-macroâ divide was crossed, leading to an analytic of âthe big in the smallâ which enables ethnographic generalization. These three points, I argue, continue to serve as a fertile source of inspiration for innovative and explorative research into language in society
Formatting online actions: #justsaying on Twitter
The hashtag #justsaying is one of Twitterâs global stock hashtags. The hashtag is nontopical and appears to fulfill a complex range of metapragmatic framing functions. In this paper, I shall look at Dutch-language tweets in which the hashtag is being used as a fully enregistered âtranslingualâ framing device, and I will attempt an analysis focused on the specific kinds of communicative actions it marks and organizes. I shall use the notion of formatting as the point of departure: hashtags, as part of an innovative online scripted register, can be seen as formatting devices that introduce, proleptically, a recognizable framing effect on the statement (the tweet), often as a reframing response to other statements giving keys for complex and multiple but equally formatted forms of uptake. The hashtag, thus, appears to have powerful interactional structuring effects in formatting specific lines of action
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