Publication | Closed Access
Social network and social class: Toward an integrated sociolinguistic model
492
Citations
33
References
1992
Year
Linguistic AnthropologySocial TheoryEducationLanguage VariationCommunicationSocial StructuresSocial NetworkLanguage LearningApplied LinguisticsSocial DynamicNorthern IrelandDiscourse AnalysisLanguage StudiesInteractional LinguisticsSociolinguisticsSociology LensSocial ClassHuman CommunicationLanguage SymbiosisSocial ComputingSociologySocial AnthropologyLinguistics
ABSTRACT In sociolinguistics, approaches that use the variables of socioeconomic class and social network have often been thought to be irreconcilable. In this article, we explore the connection between these variables and suggest the outlines of a model that can integrate them in a coherent way. This depends on linking a consensus-based microlevel of network with a conflict-based macrolevel of social class. We suggest interpretations of certain sociolinguistic findings, citing detailed evidence from research in Northern Ireland and Philadelphia, which emphasize the need for acknowledging the importance of looseknit network ties in facilitating linguistic innovations. We then propose that the link between network and class can be made via the notion of weak network ties using the process-based model of the macrolevel suggested by Thomas Højrup's theory of life-modes. (Sociolinguistics, sociology, quantitative social dialectology, anthropological linguistics)
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