Default due date: Apr 13, 2024 at 11:59 p.m.
Word count: 1000
So far in this class we have encountered a number of abstract ideas that anthropologists of communication use to capture and analyze the social life of language, or the social and material dimensions of communication as a practice and as an event.
Linguistic anthropology, like semiotics, can be faulted for being an example of the kind of sociolinguistic variation it often describes. You have be in with the in-crowd, and to get in, you need to learn the secret passwords.1) When scholars use specialized jargon, they might intend to be precise, but their discourse often ends up indexing—oops!—a position of social privilege (and arguably some people are positioning themselves as a privileged type of person—an expert, a sage, a guru—when they choose a prestigious register).2).
Abstraction isn’t bad, and having handy words to refer to abstract concepts isn’t necessarily obfuscatory. It can be, though. The purpose of higher learning is to see the world more clearly, to dispel murk and fog and find deeper truths. To do so, we must always be asking ourselves how we define our terms. To use a big word for an abstract idea, you have to be able to ELI5: to explain it like you’re talking to a five-year-old. This is not just an intellectual virtue, it’s a matter of justice. Talking in specialized jargon is by definition inaccesible to everyone else, but everyone benefits from critical awareness of their social reality.
For this paper, make one of the concepts we have encountered in class readings more accessible to an educated, interested, lay reader. Imagine that you are writing for a 16-year-old high school student. (So it’s ELI16. Let’s not go crazy.) To do that, you’d need to speak in words they understand, specifically the register they learn to use when they read their high school textbooks.
Above all, you would have to use your own words to communicate what an idea means. You would not be able to quote from another source. Using a source in quotation would just fall back on the specialized terminology you’re trying to move beyond, and appealing to another person’s words as a source of knowledge just reinforces the hierarchy of guru and disciple. You want to explain something clearly and make it feel like anyone can learn this new idea with a little guidance and reflection.
You are already preparing for this task in your other work for class, the weekly journal and your contributions to a knowledge base for the class. In fact, I want you to build on what you are writing for your journal and for the class wiki. Use these as sources. Cite them!
In this essay, however, you will be using your own original words to express other people’s ideas. I want you to impose rules on yourself to develop a specific skill.
Cite your sources for ideas, examples, and information but describe and explain what you think is important about them in your own words, as part of your message to your imagined 16-year-old audience.
For your essay, choose one key concept from the class readings we have discussed. Some possible topics are:
There are many other possibilities. Ask Ryan for more guidance. You should select an abstract concept rather than a descriptive term for a specific, concrete example or situation. For instance, Hill’s (1998) term for parodic quotation of Spanish by English speakers, “Mock Spanish,” is her coinage, but it’s a name for something concrete. She uses a theory of the social effects of language to explain why Mock Spanish is important, and the terms she uses from this theory are appropriate for this assignment.
My only expectation is that you submit a well-written and neatly formatted document that cites your sources of information and lists all of the references that you cite.
I don’t have specific requirements for a format or style of references, but you can tell if you have done a good job. When you are done with your final version, imagine that you printed it out and accidentally left it somewhere.4) If someone picked up your paper, would they be able to send it to me, and would I be able to read it and give you a grade for the assignment?
A good guide can be found here: https://anthro.rschram.org/the_quest/documents_with_style.
If you use ChatGPT or another large language model in your writing process, you are required to document your prompts, the text that was generated, a description of how you have incorporated this into your final draft, and to attach all of this documentation as an appendix to your paper. (Also, like the other assignment, I just asked Bard “what is indexicality” and the answer was thorough but arguably could be much simpler and more accessible, and I don’t think it really grasps the depth of this idea, or why it is useful for analysis. And asking it to explain it as you might to a 16-year old was… cringey.)
For this and all of your written work, you should cite a source for every fact and every idea that you learn from someone else. I also strongly suggest that students learn how to use a bibliography manager and make it a daily habit to track what you’ve read with it. For more advice on citing sources, see this page—https://anthro.rschram.org/the_quest/citing_sources—or ask me.
Fine, if you want, you can also just write a paper arguing for this point. (Please talk to me about this option.)
Hill, Jane H. 1998. “Language, Race, and White Public Space.” American Anthropologist 100 (3): 680–89. https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1998.100.3.680.
Romaine, Suzanne. (1988) 2017. Pidgin and Creole Languages. London: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315504971.