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Ethnicity in linguistic variation: White and coloured identities in Afrikaans-English code-switching

Tijdschriftbijdrage - Tijdschriftartikel

The Afrikaans speech community is characterized by a long-standing rift between Whites and Coloureds, and is for a large part bilingual, with English being increasingly integrated in its stylistic repertoire. Yet, the history of English is different across the White/Coloured divide, as in particular in terms of diffusion and in terms of ideological associations. The question we wish to ask is twofold. First, how far may there be a question of ethnic norms of Afrikaans-English code-switching? Second, how these distinct group norms affect the use made of code-switching to negotiate White and Coloured ethnic identities?
This contribution is organized in three main parts. First, we give an overview of the different forms of Afrikaans-English code-switching encountered across Whites and Coloureds on the basis of a corpus of informal speech data. Then we give an overview of the sequential patterns of Afrikaans-English code-switching following a CA methodology. Finally, we determine with the help of macrosocial knowledge in how far these different forms and functions of Afrikaans-English code-switching are made relevant to the projection of White and Coloured identities in South Africa's current post-Apartheid context on the basis of select individual examples.
The results of our analysis shows that Afrikaans-English code-switching in the Coloured data shows the features of a 'mixed code', perceived as a 'we-code', where English input tends to be stylistically neutral. By contrast, English input is more syntactically and sequentially salient in the White data, and more visibly serves purposes of identity-negotiation. Despite those differences, there remains a clear correlation in both White and Coloured samples between the use of English monolingual code and affiliation with 'New South African values'.
Tijdschrift: Pragmatics
ISSN: 1018-2101
Issue: 20
Volume: 3
Pagina's: 425-447
Jaar van publicatie:2010
Trefwoorden:Sociolinguistics, A, Afrikaans, Code-switching