Stylistic variation in /r/

Shifting personas on a bridal reality television show

Authors

  • Maeve Eberhardt University of Vermont Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/sols.33923

Keywords:

style, persona, New York City, /r/, reality television

Abstract

Contemporary sociolinguistic scholarship has made great gains in uncovering how speakers actively project identities through the manipulation of linguistic forms. This paper adds to that body of work, investigating stylistic variation among a group of women on the reality show Say Yes to the Dress in New York City. I focus on the interactional shifts of these women, who move between two personas as bridal consultants: bridal gown expert and friend of the bride. Through qualitative and quantitative analyses, I show that intraspeaker variation in /r/ is motivated by the interactional roles that the women project as they engage in various speech activity types when enacting these different facets of the self.

Author Biography

  • Maeve Eberhardt, University of Vermont

    Maeve Eberhardt is an Assistant Professor of Linguistics at the University of Vermont, United States. Her research focuses on race, gender, sexuality, and the way in which these identities intersect and are performed in language, and how they are represented in various media, including literature, television, and popular music.

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Published

2019-05-02

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Eberhardt, M. (2019). Stylistic variation in /r/ Shifting personas on a bridal reality television show. Sociolinguistic Studies, 12(3-4), 345-366. https://doi.org/10.1558/sols.33923

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