Residents’ perceptions on Sepitori, a mixed language spoken in greater Pretoria, South Africa

Authors

  • Pedro Álvarez-Mosquera University of South Africa and University of Salamanca Author
  • Elirea Bornman University of South Africa Author
  • Thabo Ditsele Tshwane University of Technology Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/sols.33643

Keywords:

mixed language, urban marker, social perception, lingua franca, Sepitori, South Africa

Abstract

This article investigates, from the residents’ viewpoint, perceptions on the role and usage of Sepitori, a mixed language which originated in greater Pretoria (South Africa). Based on the thematic coding of two focus group interviews (18 participants in total), our data show that although Sepitori acts as a salient urban marker, important differences are observed between insiders (brought up in greater Pretoria) and outsiders (brought up outside greater Pretoria). While insiders corroborated that Sepitori is the L1 of many residents regardless of their age or social status, outsiders tended to regard Sepitori as any combination of languages associated with stereotypical features of gangsterism and Tsotsitaal. Signi?cantly, testimonies underlined a prevalent use of this variety in a growing number of social contexts due to its important role in facilitating intergroup communication.

Author Biographies

  • Pedro Álvarez-Mosquera, University of South Africa and University of Salamanca

    Pedro Álvarez-Mosquera is a full-time lecturer at the University of Salamanca, Spain. During his academic career, he was awarded a Fulbright scholarship to support his PhD thesis research at the Claremont Colleges. His main areas of research are sociolinguistics, cognitive linguistics, linguistic landscape, and discourse analysis.

  • Elirea Bornman, University of South Africa

    Elirea Bornman is a research professor in the Department of Communication Science of the University of South Africa (Unisa). She holds a doctoral degree in Social Psychology from Unisa. Her main research interests are social identification patterns in post-apartheid South Africa; language and identity; and nation-building in Africa and South Africa.

  • Thabo Ditsele, Tshwane University of Technology

    Thabo Ditsele is a senior lecturer at Tshwane University of Technology (TUT) and holds a Doctoral degree in Language Practice from the same university. Currently, he is pursuing a PhD in Linguistics at the University of Cape Town (UCT), South Africa. Among others, his research interests are: non-standard varieties (mainly Sepitori and Tsotsitaal), language and identity, and language attitudes.

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Published

2019-05-02

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Álvarez-Mosquera, P., Bornman, E., & Ditsele, T. (2019). Residents’ perceptions on Sepitori, a mixed language spoken in greater Pretoria, South Africa. Sociolinguistic Studies, 12(3-4), 439-459. https://doi.org/10.1558/sols.33643

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