Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) S. Gal
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Chicago, USA
ANO 2013
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Anthropological Theory
ISSN 1463-4996
E-ISSN 1741-2641
EDITORA SAGE Publications
DOI 10.1177/1463499613483396
CITAÇÕES 22
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 b2fa99157db1346f16cc2d0a03c44074

Resumo

This essay explores the semiotic processes by which speakers attribute sensuous qualities – e.g. lightness, dryness, straightness and others – to speech registers. Language ideologies create indexical relations linking linguistic forms to typical personae, activities and values in social life; they also construct other semiotic relations that enable speakers to attribute taste, texture, smell, sound, or shape to speech. Such extended, cross-modal, sensuous metaphors are taken up as lived experience, as part of larger frameworks of cultural value. By extending several Peircean concepts, the essay shows how speakers become persuaded that such sensuous properties of speech are existentially real. Two pedagogical genres from 19th and 20th century Hungary illustrate how properties of speech are reproduced, either via explicit instruction or as displayed in the parallelism of narrative. Both genres construct speech qualia as constitutive moves in moral and political projects that become more persuasive through the display of valued qualia.

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