In:Pragmatics of Accents
Edited by Gaëlle Planchenault and Livia Poljak
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 327] 2021
► pp. 163–186
English-language attitudes and identities in Spain
Accent variation and the negotiation of possible selves
Published online: 11 October 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.327.07car
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.327.07car
Abstract
Language attitude research has increasingly focused on English-language learners’ evaluations of
various accents and their ability to recognise them. However, little academic attention has been paid to the
links between language attitudes and use, or language attitudes and identities. Contextualised within two
Spanish universities, this chapter explores learners’ English-mediated identities via questionnaires and
interviews, and the ways in which they negotiate possible selves within paired interactions. Quantitative data
suggest that attitudes can predict use to some extent, but qualitative data provide much deeper insights into
the negotiation of identity using rich sociolinguistic repertoires. The chapter concludes with some
reflections on the nature of the relationship between language attitudes, language use and second-language
identities.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Theoretical background: Attitudes and identities in L2 learning
- Attitude-behaviour relations in language
- L2 learner identities
- Language ideologies in Spain
- 3.Methods and procedures
- 4.Findings on attitude-behaviour relations in language
- 5.Findings on identity and the negotiation of possible selves
- Ana and Bernardo: The ought-to self and the search for authenticity
- Carmen and Dani: Sounding well-polished, sounding like a native speaker
- Enrique and Fernando: Normative conformity and the lack of a linguistic ideal self
- 6.Conclusions and reflections
Notes References Appendix
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