Reconstructing Kinship or the pragmatics of kin talk

This article argues that kinship terminologies are best studied in their full linguistic context; the data should be collected from naturally occurring conversation rather than elicited with frames, and recognition must be given to the fact that people choose which expressions to use. Other means ar...

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מחבר ראשי: Zeitlyn, D
פורמט: Journal article
יצא לאור: Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain 1993
נושאים:
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author Zeitlyn, D
author_facet Zeitlyn, D
author_sort Zeitlyn, D
collection OXFORD
description This article argues that kinship terminologies are best studied in their full linguistic context; the data should be collected from naturally occurring conversation rather than elicited with frames, and recognition must be given to the fact that people choose which expressions to use. Other means are available for talking to or about kin: in any language there are many ways of referring to people. These include the use of kin terms, names, nicknames, titles and pronouns. These 'social deictic' terms are used in different social contexts. Analysis of the context shows the inadequacy of the address/reference distinction. However, the connexions between the choice of linguistic means and the social context are central to social anthropology, so new approaches must be sought. A Mambila transcript is examined, and some suggestions are made as to how a large body of conversational data could be approached in order to analyse the social deictic terms employed. The central problem for the student is to see his kinship terminology as a definite part of the dynamism of kinship relations, to determine how far the separation and combination of relatives under linguistic labels can be correlated with other sociological phenomena (Firth 1936: 226).
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spelling oxford-uuid:b4dbf87d-71c0-4e40-a946-6a28c817b2a12022-03-27T04:29:13ZReconstructing Kinship or the pragmatics of kin talkJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:b4dbf87d-71c0-4e40-a946-6a28c817b2a1AnthropologyOxford University Research Archive - ValetRoyal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain1993Zeitlyn, DThis article argues that kinship terminologies are best studied in their full linguistic context; the data should be collected from naturally occurring conversation rather than elicited with frames, and recognition must be given to the fact that people choose which expressions to use. Other means are available for talking to or about kin: in any language there are many ways of referring to people. These include the use of kin terms, names, nicknames, titles and pronouns. These 'social deictic' terms are used in different social contexts. Analysis of the context shows the inadequacy of the address/reference distinction. However, the connexions between the choice of linguistic means and the social context are central to social anthropology, so new approaches must be sought. A Mambila transcript is examined, and some suggestions are made as to how a large body of conversational data could be approached in order to analyse the social deictic terms employed. The central problem for the student is to see his kinship terminology as a definite part of the dynamism of kinship relations, to determine how far the separation and combination of relatives under linguistic labels can be correlated with other sociological phenomena (Firth 1936: 226).
spellingShingle Anthropology
Zeitlyn, D
Reconstructing Kinship or the pragmatics of kin talk
title Reconstructing Kinship or the pragmatics of kin talk
title_full Reconstructing Kinship or the pragmatics of kin talk
title_fullStr Reconstructing Kinship or the pragmatics of kin talk
title_full_unstemmed Reconstructing Kinship or the pragmatics of kin talk
title_short Reconstructing Kinship or the pragmatics of kin talk
title_sort reconstructing kinship or the pragmatics of kin talk
topic Anthropology
work_keys_str_mv AT zeitlynd reconstructingkinshiporthepragmaticsofkintalk