Loading...
Language, queerly phrased: a sociolinguistic examination of nonbinary gender identity in French
Journal Title
Keywords
Research Subject Categories::HUMANITIES and RELIGION::Languages and linguistics::Linguistic subjects::Linguistics
Research Subject Categories::HUMANITIES and RELIGION::Languages and linguistics::Romance languages::French language
Communication studies
Sociolinguistics
Queer linguistics
Nonbinary
Hebrew
Japanese
Pronouns
LGBTQ community
Social media
Nonbinary pronouns
Research Subject Categories::HUMANITIES and RELIGION::Languages and linguistics::Romance languages::French language
Communication studies
Sociolinguistics
Queer linguistics
Nonbinary
Hebrew
Japanese
Pronouns
LGBTQ community
Social media
Nonbinary pronouns
Readers/Advisors
Journal Title
Term and Year
Publication Date
2019-05
Book Title
Publication Volume
Publication Issue
Publication Begin
Publication End
Number of pages
Files
Loading...
Delcano_Honors.pdf
Adobe PDF, 499.68 KB
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Abstract
Language, a uniquely human skill, is intrinsic to the self. Beyond its base communication purpose, language serves to shape the identity of the speakers who use it. One of the biggest examples of language defining and confining interlocutors’ identities is the concept of gender. Based on a language’s use of gender, speakers of that language are confined to the gender rules set forth in grammatical systems. How then can people who do not identify as male or female be recognized as legitimate if the language they speak does not accommodate for their gender identity?
This thesis aims to examine how gender variant people speak in gendered languages, first examining English, Hebrew and Japanese as case studies, then moving on to the historically rigid and regulated French. This study examines respondents’ proposed solutions to the French language’s lack of a non-gendered pronoun on social media to see if it is indeed possible for people to identify themselves and each other in a language that does not structurally recognize them as legitimate.
Citation
DOI
Description
Accessibility Statement
If this SOAR repository item is not accessible to you (e.g. able to be used in the context of a disability), please email libraryaccessibility@newpaltz.edu
