In:Offers and Offer Refusals: A postcolonial pragmatics perspective on World Englishes
Eric A. Anchimbe
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 298] 2018
► pp. 249–274
Chapter 6Postcolonial hybrid structures and social interaction
Published online: 15 November 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.298.c6
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.298.c6
Article outline
- 6.1Language identities and linguistic in-groups
- 6.1.1Linguistic identities on ex-colonial languages
- 6.1.2Linguistic identities on ethnic languages
- 6.1.3Multilingualism and code-switching
- 6.1.4Linguistic victimisation and identity opportunism
- 6.2Ethnic or tribal in-group relationships
- 6.2.1Ethnicity as identity marker
- 6.2.2Ethnicity as a target for stereotyping
- 6.3Religious belonging
- 6.3.1Religion as a (moral) code of conduct
- 6.3.2Religion as a target of stigmatisation
- 6.3.3Religion as source of protection and healing
- 6.3.4Religion as an egalitarian social institution
- 6.4Social roles and collectivist expectations
- 6.4.1Kinship role expectations
- 6.4.2Age role expectations
- 6.4.3Occupational and professional role expectations
- 6.4.4Gender role expectations
- 6.5Summary: Hybrid, hybridising postcolonial systems
Notes
