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Identity Perspectives from Peripheries
Data dubbed “peripheral” or previously unaccounted for have inspired new methods, new models and theories of language and new ways of understanding language and communication within pragmatics. The chapters in the volume extend this perspective to include language users and their identities as central, taking into account the ideologies that mediate their perception of language use. Identities and peripheries are approached geographically (Europe, North America, Africa, Asia; dialectal variation), socially (gender, age, social status), medially (traditional, electronic and multimedia), occupationally (trade, congregation) and from the points of view of healthcare and of professional relations. The volume includes the editors’ introductory overview of challenges in the field, and chapters divided into three parts, Building the Peripheral Stage; Identities in Interaction; and Gender, Narratives, and Peripheries. By particularizing a variety of linguistic peripheries, the volume fosters a deeper understanding of human interaction.
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 352] 2025. vii, 295 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 13 June 2025
Published online on 13 June 2025
© John Benjamins
Table of Contents
- Foreword | pp. vii–viii
- Introduction
- Chapter 1. Identities and peripheriesYoshiko Matsumoto and Jan-Ola Östman | pp. 2–15
- Part I. Building the peripheral stage
- Chapter 2. Identity glocalization in rural peripheriesJan-Ola Östman | pp. 18–35
- Chapter 3. Location! location! location! (and transcultural capital): Reframing peripherality as opportunity at an Istanbul kebab shopAnne Ambler Schluter | pp. 36–65
- Chapter 4. Dimensions of periphery: Identity work in a multilingual German-African church serviceCornelia F. Bock | pp. 66–91
- Part II. Identities in interaction
- Chapter 5. Knowledge distribution in provenance inquiries: Small talk in Nigerian clinical meetingsAkin Odebunmi | pp. 94–124
- Chapter 6. From the peripheries of adulthood: Deconstructing culturally-expected identities of age categoriesYoshiko Matsumoto and Judit Kroo | pp. 125–144
- Chapter 7. Making distinctions between “us” and “them” in a meta-frame of interactionMakiko Takekuro | pp. 145–166
- Chapter 8. Core vs. peripheral descriptions of an ambivalent identity: Adults with Autism Spectrum DisordersKyoko Aizaki | pp. 167–185
- Part III. Gender, narratives, and peripheries
- Chapter 9. Voices from the Kazakhstani periphery: Constructing an identity of a village woman through a selfportrait in a mealtime narrativeAisulu Kulbayeva | pp. 188–217
- Chapter 10. Death-Row inmates’ last statements: Establishing identity through expressions of responsibilityJan-Ola Östman and Helena Halmari | pp. 218–234
- Chapter 11. Querying peripheral identities with penumbral positionings in ‘gay’ immigrants’ ‘coming-back-in’ narrativesPing-Hsuan Wang | pp. 235–259
- Chapter 12. #transandproud: Narrative positioning and construction of female‑to‑male transgender identity on InstagramKatherine Arnold-Murray | pp. 260–289
- Index | pp. 291–295