Publication | Open Access
Southernizing and decolonizing the Sociology of Language: African scholarship matters
111
Citations
8
References
2021
Year
Critical Race TheoryAfrican LiteratureColonialismSouth African HistoryLinguistic AnthropologyAfrican DiasporaDecolonization StrategiesBlack ExperienceSocial SciencesRaceContemporary RacismAfrican HistoryRaciolinguisticsAfrican American StudiesLinguistic DiversityLanguage StudiesLanguage PromotionFocus ShiftSociolinguisticsIntersectionalityPostcolonial StudiesAfrican StudiesAnti-racismCultureAfrican HumanitiesParticular AfricaAfrocentricityAnthropologyAfrican Scholarship Matters
Abstract In this short article we call for decolonization strategies in the Sociology of Language through a focus shift towards the global South, in particular Africa and a heightened attention to “race” as a significant category. We highlight three primary points that require critical attention in a decolonized Sociology of Language: (i) the identification of northern sociolinguistic theories which have been masked as universal and a critical shift towards theoretical frameworks emerging from the South; (ii) the acknowledgement of “white” privilege and “white fragility” in language studies and its related problem of ignoring “race” as a significant category, in scholarship as well as among authors/editors; and (iii) the under-representation of (especially female) scholars of colour in sociolinguistic research.
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