Publication | Closed Access
Integrating Intersectionality in Language, Gender, and Sexuality Research
155
Citations
74
References
2015
Year
Queer PoliticsLinguistic AnthropologyHomosexualityQueer TheoryIntersectionality TheorySocial SciencesIdentity Studies (Intersectionality Studies)Sexual CulturesGender IdentityGender TheoryGender StudiesTransgender StudyLanguage StudiesOppression StudiesSociolinguisticsIntersectionalitySocial ClassSexual DiversityAlternative SexualityIdentity Studies (Memory Studies)Trans StudiesGender StereotypeSexuality ResearchSexuality StudiesSexual OrientationLinguistics
Abstract In this paper, I argue for the need to integrate intersectionality theory more fully in language, gender, and sexuality research. I outline the basic principles of what an intersectional approach to identity and identity‐linked speech entails, focusing particularly on the belief that an adequate description of lived experience, and hence social practice, requires us to consider the ways in which multiple systems of social categorization (e.g., gender and sexuality, race/ethnicity, social class, and place) intersect with one another in dynamic and mutually constitutive ways. I review research on the linguistic perception and production of gender and sexuality that has adopted an intersectional perspective to date and argue that while certain aspects of the theory have long had a foothold in work in this area, the field's engagement with the full ramifications of intersectionality as an analytical framework has been partial. I conclude with suggestions about how to anchor a more comprehensive approach to intersectionality in sociolinguistic research.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1