Article published In: English World-Wide
Vol. 35:3 (2014) ► pp.306–337
“Coconuts” and the middle-class
Identity change and the emergence of a new prestigious English variety in South Africa
Published online: 10 October 2014
https://doi.org/10.1075/eww.35.3.03wil
https://doi.org/10.1075/eww.35.3.03wil
This paper presents a sociolinguistic investigation of language use in the South African context. It focuses on socio-cultural and subsequent phonetic change in two prestigious secondary school environments in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. Adopting a poststructuralist lens, it considers how female isiXhosa mother tongue speakers, who attend private and ex-model-C English schools, are undergoing changes in identity, which are mirrored in the acquisition of a new, prestigious variety of English. The research adopts a Labovian form of data collection, notably the use of sociolinguistic interviews, as well as sociophonetic analysis. The findings suggest that changes in identity construction are evident, both in terms of speech accommodation and cultural assimilation. Middle-class isiXhosa mother tongue speakers are now proficient in both English and isiXhosa, and both languages are used strategically to take up different identity positions. The findings also suggest that a new prestigious English variety is emerging, one that is deracialised, and is associated rather with social class.
References (49)
Babbie, Earl, and Johann Mouton. 2001. The Practice of Social Research. Cape Town: Oxford University Press Southern Africa.
Bangeni, Bongi, and Rochelle Kapp. 2007. “Shifting Language Attitudes in a Linguistically Diverse Learning Environment in South Africa”. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 281: 253–269.
Bekker, Ian. 2009. “The Vowels of South African English”. PhD dissertation, North-West University, South Africa.
Bekker, Ian, and Gina Eley. 2007. “An Acoustic Analysis of White South African English (WSAfE) Monophthongs”. Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies 251: 107–114. >
Boersma, Paul, and David Weenink. 2011. “Praat: Doing Phonetics by Computer” (Version 5.1.05). [URL] (accessed February 1, 2011)
Bradac, James. 1990. “Language Attitudes and Impression Formation”. In Peter Robinson, and Howard Giles, eds. Handbook of Language and Social Psychology. New York: John Wiley and Sons, 387–412.>
Buthelezi, Qedusizi. 1995. “South African Black English: Lexical and Syntactic Characteristics”. In Rajend Mesthrie, ed. Language and Social History: Studies in South African Sociolinguistics. Cape Town: David Philip Publishers, 242–250.
Cohen, Lewis, Lawrence Manion, and Keith Morrison, eds. 2011. Research Methods in Education (7th ed.). London and New York: Routledge.
Da Silva, Arista. 2008. “South African English: A Sociolinguistic Investigation of an Emerging Variety”. PhD dissertation, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa.
De Klerk, Vivian. 1999. “Black South African English: Where To From Here?”. World Englishes 181: 311–324.
. 2000a. “Language Shift in Grahamstown: A Case Study of Selected Xhosa Speakers”. International Journal of the Sociology of Language 1461: 87–110.
. 2000b. “To Be Xhosa or Not to Be Xhosa... That Is the Question”. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 211: 198–215.
Di Paolo, Marianna, Malcah Yaeger-Dror, and Alicia Beckford Wassink. 2011. “Analyzing Vowels”. In Marianna Di Paolo, and Malcah Yaeger-Dror, eds. Sociophonetics: A Student’s Guide. London and New York: Routledge, 223–281.
Fasold, Ralph. 1984. The Sociolinguistics of Society: An Introduction to Sociolinguistics Volume 1. Oxford: Blackwell.
Fiske, Edward, and Helen Ladd. 2004a. Elusive Equity: Education Reform in Post-Apartheid South Africa. Washington, D. C.: Brookings Institution Press.
. 2004b. “Balancing Public and Private Resources for Basic Education: School Fees in Post-Apartheid South Africa”. In Linda Chisholm, ed. Changing Class: Educational and Social Change in Post-Apartheid South Africa.Cape Town: HSRC Press, 57–88.
Gaganakis, Margaret. 1992. “Language and Ethnic Group Relations in Non-Racial Schools”. English Academy Review: Southern African Journal of English Studies 91: 46–55.
Giles, Howard. 1973. “Accent Mobility: A Model and Some Data”. Anthropological Linguistics 151: 87–105.
Hofmeyr, Jane, and Simon Lee. 2004. “The New Face of Private Schooling”. In Linda Chisholm, ed. Changing Class: Educational and Social Change in Post-Apartheid South Africa. Cape Town: HSRC Press, 143–174.
Kamwangamalu, Nkonko. 2002. “The Social History of English in South Africa”. World Englishes 211: 1–8.
Kaschula, Russell, and Christine Anthonissen. 1995. Communicating Across Culture in South Africa: Toward a Critical Language Awareness. Johannesburg: Hodder and Stoughton.
Lanham, Leonhard, and Callum Macdonald. 1979. The Standard in South African English and Its Social History. Heidelberg: Julius Groos.
Lass, Roger. 1995. “South African English”. In Rajend Mesthrie, ed. Language and Social History: Studies in South African Sociolinguistics. Cape Town: David Phillip, 89–106.
Makoe, Pinky. 2007. “Language, Discourses and Identity Construction in a Multilingual South African Primary School”. English Academy Review: Southern African Journal of English Studies 241: 55–71.
Makubalo, George. 2007. “‘I Don’t Know... It Contradicts’: Identity Construction and the Use of English by High School Learners in a Desegregated Space”. English Academy Review: Southern African Journal of English Studies 241: 25–41.
McKinney, Carolyn. 2009. “‘If I Speak English, Does It Make Me Less Black Anyway?’: ‘Race’ and English in South African Desegregated Schools”. English Academy Review: Southern African Journal of English Studies 241: 6–24.
McLaughlin, Eric. 2006. “Language, Democracy and Governance in South Africa”. In Victor Webb, and Theo Du Plessis, eds. The Politics of Language in South Africa. Pretoria: Van Schaik, 118–137.
Mesthrie, Rajend. 2006. “Language, Transformation and Development: A Sociolinguistic Appraisal of Post-Apartheid South Africa Language Policy and Practice”. Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies 241: 151–163.
. 2010. “Socio-Phonetics and Social Change: Deracialisation of the GOOSE Vowel in South African English”. Journal of Sociolinguistics 141: 3–33.
. 2012. “English in Africa: A Diachronic Typology”. In Alexander Berg, and Laurel Brinton, eds. Handbücher zur Sprach-und Kommunikationswissenschaft/ Handbooks of Linguistics and Communication Science (English Historical Linguistics, Volume 2). Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 2092–2106.
Milroy, Lesley. 2002. “Social Networks”. In Jack Chambers, Peter Trudgill, and Natalie Schilling-Estes, eds. The Handbook of Language Variation and Change. Oxford: Blackwell, 549–572.
Myers-Scotton, Carol. 2002. Contact Linguistics: Bilingual Encounters and Grammatical Outcomes. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Ndlangamandla, Sibusiso. 2010. “(Unofficial) Multilingualism in Desegregated Schools: Learners’ Use Of and View Towards African Languages”. Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies 281: 61–73.
Nongogo, Nomakhalipha. 2007. “‘Mina ’ngumZulu phaqa’: Language and Identity Among Multilingual Grade 9 Learners at a Private Desegregated High School in South Africa”. English Academy Review: Southern African Journal of English Studies 241: 42–54.
Peirce, Bonny. 1995. “Social Identity, Investment, and Language Learning”. TESOL Quarterly 291: 9–31.
Provincial Profile. 2004: Eastern Cape / Statistics South Africa. Pretoria: Statistics South Africa, 2006. Report No. 00-91-02(2004). [URL] (accessed February 4, 2011).
Reagan, Timothy. 2009. Language Matters: Reflections on Educational Linguistics. Charlotte, NC: Information Age.
Riches, Phoebe, and Margaret Foddy. 1989. “Ethnic Accent as a Status Cue”. Social Psychology Quarterly 521: 197–206.
Rudwick, Stephanie. 2008. “‘Coconuts’ and ‘Oreos’: English-Speaking Zulu People in a South African Township”. World Englishes 271: 101–116.
Soudien, Crain. 2004. “‘Constituting the Class’: An Analysis of the Process of ‘Integration’ in South African Schools”. In Linda Chisholm, ed. Changing Class: Educational and Social Change in Post-Apartheid South Africa. Cape Town: HSRC Press, 89–114.
Thomas, Erik, and Tyler Kendall. 2007. “NORM: The Vowel Normalization and Plotting Suite”. [URL] (accessed March 6, 2011).
Van Rooy, Bertus. 2004. “Black South African English”. In Bernd Kortmann, Edgar Schneider, Kate Burridge, Rajend Mesthrie, and Clive Upton, eds. A Handbook of Varieties of English. Volume 1: Phonology. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 943–952.
Watt, Dominic, and Anne Fabricius. 2002. “Evaluation of a Technique for Improving the Mapping of Multiple Speakers’ Vowel Spaces in the F1˜F2 Plane”. In Diane Nelson, ed. Leeds Working Papers in Linguistics and Phonetics 9, 159–173. [URL] (accessed December 5, 2010).
Watt, Dominic, Anne Fabricius, and Tyler Kendall. 2011. “More on Vowels”. In Marianna Di Paolo, and Malcah Yaeger-Dror, eds. Sociophonetics: A Student’s Guide. London and New York: Routledge, 282–316.
Wilmot, Kirstin. 2011. “Socio-Cultural Change in Two Prestigious Secondary Schools in South Africa: A Sociophonetic Study of Black and White Females”. MA dissertation, University of Cape Town, South Africa.
Cited by (14)
Cited by 14 other publications
Dharani, Babar, Tamira Gunzburg & Kurt April
Sharma, Devyani
Botha, Werner, Bertus van Rooy & Susan Coetzee‐van Rooy
Bekker, Ian
Kotze, Haidee
Verhoeven, Monique, Astrid M. G. Poorthuis & Monique Volman
Álvarez-Mosquera, Pedro & Alejandro Marín-Gutiérrez
Álvarez-Mosquera, Pedro & Alejandro Marín-Gutiérrez
Toefy, Tracey
2017. Revisiting the kit-split in Coloured South African English. English World-Wide. A Journal of Varieties of English 38:3 ► pp. 336 ff.
Álvarez-Mosquera, Pedro
Álvarez-Mosquera, Pedro
2019. Young Coloureds’ implicit attitudes towards two historically White English accents in the South African context. English World-Wide. A Journal of Varieties of English 40:3 ► pp. 325 ff.
Mesthrie, Rajend
Mesthrie, Rajend, Alida Chevalier & Timothy Dunne
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 9 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
