Gafaranga1999

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Gafaranga1999
BibType ARTICLE
Key Gafaranga1999
Author(s) Joseph Gafaranga
Title Language choice as a significant aspect of talk organization: the orderliness of language alternation
Editor(s)
Tag(s) Interactional Linguistics, Language Choice, Code-switching
Publisher
Year 1999
Language
City
Month
Journal Text
Volume 19
Number 2
Pages 201–225
URL Link
DOI 10.1515/text.1.1999.19.2.201
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

A common assumption in research on talk, especially in research on talk among bilingual Speakers, is that people speak languages. This assumption leads to a serious issue of the orderliness of language alternation among bilingual Speakers, of the possibility of conducting a conversational activity in two languages. To account for the orderliness of this type of talk, most researchers (e.g., Gumperz 1982; Myers-Scotton 1993b) have tended to focus on the symbolic dimension of language and argued that language alternation is not random for it is socioculturally significant. While language alternation does indeed have a symbolic dimension, it is also an instance ofpractical action and it is on this level that issues of its feasibility arise. As a consequence, another tradition of research (e.g., Auer 1984, 1988, 1995), which investigates talk among bilingual Speakers äs an instance of practical action, is fast developing. The problem with this tradition is that, drawing on the concept of language äs an analytical tool, it can account only for some instances of language alternation. Therefore, this article comes in the thrust of this second research perspective and suggests ways of overcoming that difficulty. More specifically, the article argues for the need to suspend the concept of language, to see talk äs an orderly activity and language choice äs a significant aspect of that order. It argues that the concept of medium of an interactional episode, rather than that of language, can allow the analyst to account for the orderliness of language alternation, for the possibility of conducting a conversation in two languages.

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