Article published In: Language Planning and Varieties of (Modern Standard) Chinese
Edited by Minglang Zhou
[Journal of Asian Pacific Communication 16:2] 2006
► pp. 175–196
Nanjing language survey and the theory of speech community
Published online: 12 October 2006
https://doi.org/10.1075/japc.16.2.03xu
https://doi.org/10.1075/japc.16.2.03xu
One of the central issues in the theory of speech community is whether speech community is a naturally-existing entity or a research construct without any restricted empirical basis. The issue is attacked here by way of a language survey. The survey was on language-choice behavior in public places, conducted in the city of Nanjing in 2002. The survey results show: (a) Nanjing residents’ verbal behavior exhibits a specific order of social convention and the urban population thus makes up an effective body of social communication. (b) The ordered behavior reflects a community-wide evaluative system that governs linguistic heterogeneity. (c) The thinning-out of the regularity among the individuals’ behaviors is typically found both in the spatial and the temporal marginals of the urban population. The study supports the hypothesis that a speech community is a naturally-existing entity. An attitudinal-behavioral and impactal unity is the core of such existence. With the approach taken here, a speech community can be discovered with certain well-defined empirical procedures. The wider significance invoked is that the organizational system of speakers is an important linguistic system alongside the other linguistic systems.
Keywords: language choice, Putonghua, Nanjinghua, Waidihua, Nanjing, language survey, speech community
Cited by (7)
Cited by seven other publications
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Berg, Marinus van den
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Chen, Si, Caroline Wiltshire, Bin Li & Ratree Wayland
2019. A quantitative analysis of tone sandhi in Standard Mandarin and Nanjing Mandarin based on surface pitch contours and
underlying pitch targets. International Journal of Chinese Linguistics 6:2 ► pp. 183 ff.
Walker, James A.
Diao, Wenhao
Xu, Daming
2016. Speech community theory and the language / dialect debate. Journal of Asian Pacific Communication 26:1 ► pp. 8 ff.
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