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Affects of verbal hygiene: the impact of language activism at a Swedish high school
Stockholm University, Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Child and Youth Studies.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-1953-4948
Number of Authors: 12021 (English)In: Language Policy, ISSN 1568-4555, E-ISSN 1573-1863, Vol. 20, p. 151-171Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

This paper explores youths’ language activism at a Swedish senior high school. Following Cameron (Verbal hygiene, Routledge, Florence, 1995), this paper investigates language activism as ‘verbal hygiene’, with a focus on the social dimension of students’ attempts to change how language is used at the school. To capture how the politically motivated language activism came to produce political subjectivities and delineation between social groups, and also to impact the distribution of agency and voice in the local discursive regime, I combine Cameron’s (Verbal hygiene, Routledge, Florence, 1995) notion of verbal hygiene with recent theorizing on affect (Ahmed in The cultural politics of emotion, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, 2004; Sedgwick in Touching feeling: affect, pedagogy, performativity, Duke University Press, Durham, 2003; Wetherell in Affect and emotion: a new social science understanding, Sage, London, 2012). Inspired by studies of semiotic landscapes (Jaworski and Thurlow in Semiotic landscapes: language, image, space, Bloomsbury Academic, London, 2011), the data includes posters and other signage in the high school, as well as recordings of naturally occurring interaction and interviews. The analysis shows how shame is pivotal in the processes of language activism at the school and how this activism, being an emancipatory project, both produces political subjectivities as well as new linguistic normativities and hierarchies.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2021. Vol. 20, p. 151-171
Keywords [en]
Verbal hygiene, Affect, Language activism, Ethnography, Youth language, Semiotic landscape
National Category
Educational Sciences
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:su:diva-185665DOI: 10.1007/s10993-020-09543-3ISI: 000563942000001OAI: oai:DiVA.org:su-185665DiVA, id: diva2:1473959
Available from: 2020-10-07 Created: 2020-10-07 Last updated: 2022-02-28Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. Political corrections: Language activism and regimentation among high school youth
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Political corrections: Language activism and regimentation among high school youth
2021 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

This thesis is concerned with senior high school students’ language activism and their efforts to navigate linguistic norms and language ideological geographies in contemporary Sweden. Guided by the traditions of child and youth studies (e.g., James & Prout, 1990) and linguistic anthropology (e.g., Bauman, 2003; Duranti, 1997), and inspired by the field of linguistic landscape (e.g., Thurlow & Jaworski, 2011), this thesis explores language regimentation as it plays out in the everyday lives of youth. 

Study I addresses the affective dimensions of language activism and language socialization. Applying affective theory (Ahmed, 2004; Sedgwick, 2003; Wetherell, 2012) enables an analysis of the workings of shame/pride in practices of verbal hygiene (Cameron, 1995) at the high school. Study I shows that shame is pivotal in the processes of language activism at the school, and explores how this activism, being an emancipatory project, produces both political subjectivities and new linguistic normativities and hierarchies. 

Study II draws on work on linguistic citizenship (Stroud, 2001, 2018) and graffiti as a semiotic mode (e.g., Cover, 2002; Karlander, 2019) in an analysis of bathroom graffiti. ‘Where are all the queers at the school?! I want to hug you’ was scribbled on the door of one of the school toilets, and the scrawl sparked a discussion, unfolding on the door, on whether ‘queer’ should be regarded as an offensive slur or not. The study of the unfolding debate illustrates Butler’s (1991) point about the difficulty of fixing the meaning of identity labels as they travel through discourse. Furthermore, the analytical lens of turbulence (Cresswell and Martin, 2012) captures the interplay and entanglements of ordering and disordering in students’ efforts to assert power over the terms that in turn define them.

Study III focuses on youths’ negotiations of who counts as an authentic speaker of the contemporary urban vernacular (Rampton, 2015) ‘förortsslang’. The paper explores students’ resemiotizations (Iedema, 2003) and recontexualizations (Bauman & Briggs, 1990) of US political activist discourse as they insert the notion of ‘cultural appropriation’ into the linguistic landscape of their senior high school. This semiotic work is part of the production of a social space and a local discursive regime that structures and polices behavior at the school, including linguistic practices. Drawing on the circulating discourses on cultural appropriation, students articulate criticism of the way middle class youths at the school appropriate the urban vernacular. 

Taken together, these studies contribute to a body of research on youth’s lived experiences by investigating the social workings of language policing and language regimentation among youth. In particular, this thesis contributes to the study of youth activism by underscoring the interplay of a political socialization of youth (Yates & Youniss, 2006) and language socialization (Aronsson, 2011; Jonsson, 2018; Schieffelin & Ochs, 1986b). Furthermore, the thesis adds to the long-standing discussion within youth studies on young subjects’ potential to act and assert power over issues that they themselves find important in their everyday lives. The studies show the complexities of situated language activism and offer a more nuanced picture of youth as agentive participants in language policy processes, but also as actors situated in a nexus of forces that condition their subjectivities and thus their ability to act. The studies show that the activism under study is entangled with processes of subjectification and that the youths’ language activism entails a struggle for an authentic voice and the right to define how a progressive ideology should be materialized in everyday language. Thereby, the studies demonstrate the key role that politics of language and language ideology play in the lives of youth. 

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Stockholm: Department of Child and Youth Studies, Stockholm University, 2021. p. 117
Keywords
Youth studies, language activism, school ethnography, language policy, linguistic landscapes, language socialization linguistic anthropology, affect, language ideology
National Category
Peace and Conflict Studies Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified
Research subject
Child and Youth Studies
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-195802 (URN)978-91-7911-588-3 (ISBN)978-91-7911-589-0 (ISBN)
Public defence
2021-10-15, hörsalen, BUV 110, Frescati backe, Svante Arrhenius väg 21 A, Stockholm, 10:00 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2021-09-22 Created: 2021-08-30 Last updated: 2025-02-20Bibliographically approved

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Årman, Henning

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