Gender, innovation and ambiguity: speech prohibitions as a resource for 'space to move'

This article is based on the observation that in African women's interactional practices, there is a space 'between speech and silence' (Gal, 1991), an ambiguous space between norm and sanction (Jaworski et al.,2005:4), which allows for the negotiation of socially and culturally adequ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Discourse & society 2009-09, Vol.20 (5), p.531-553
1. Verfasser: BECK, ROSE MARIE
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description This article is based on the observation that in African women's interactional practices, there is a space 'between speech and silence' (Gal, 1991), an ambiguous space between norm and sanction (Jaworski et al.,2005:4), which allows for the negotiation of socially and culturally adequate gendered behaviour. As it is a space of negotiation, it is also one of social change. Notions of gender, ambiguity and risk, which are characteristic for this kind of space, are thus transferred also to social change, or in more general terms, innovation. I take two widely diverging examples from the Swahili (in eastern Africa) and Herero (in south-western Africa) societies to demonstrate this hypothesis, which aims at bringing together two threads of widely discussed topics: that of gender and social change (or development); and that of gender and language. Methodologically, this article is based on a micro-analysis and contextualized reconstruction of interactional practices, which provides a privileged path into understanding local processes of social change.
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source Sociological Abstracts; SAGE Complete A-Z List; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Africa
African cultural groups
African culture
African Languages
Africans
Ambiguity
Development
Discourse
Females
Feminism
Gender
Gender roles
Grammatical gender
Herero
Innovation
Innovations
Language
Language identification
Language shift
Language use
Linguistics
Men
Negotiation
Risk
Sex
Silence
Social Change
Social Development
Social innovation
Social interaction
Sociolinguistics
Speech
Swahili
Swahili language
Women
title Gender, innovation and ambiguity: speech prohibitions as a resource for 'space to move'
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