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Zane Goebel

    Le travail de Zane Goebel explore les subtilités de la langue et de la linguistique indonésiennes, avec un accent particulier sur la sociolinguistique et une vaste recherche sur le terrain en Indonésie. Son parcours universitaire lui confère une compréhension approfondie des nuances linguistiques et du contexte culturel. Grâce à ses contributions, il vise à rendre les complexités de l'indonésien accessibles à un public plus large. Ses publications constituent des ressources précieuses pour ceux qui cherchent à s'engager avec la langue indonésienne.

    Rapport and the discursive co-construction of social relations in fieldwork encounters
    Language and Superdiversity
    Language, Migration, and Identity
    • Language, Migration, and Identity

      Neighborhood Talk in Indonesia

      • 240pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      The book delves into the dynamics of language in contact settings, examining how it shapes and reflects identities, social expectations, and relationships. It highlights the intricate ways in which communication influences personal and group identities, offering insights into the social implications of language use in diverse contexts.

      Language, Migration, and Identity
    • Language and Superdiversity

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      Scholars of language ideology have encouraged us to reflect on and explore where social categories come from, how they have been reproduced, and whether and to what extent they are relevant to everyday interactional practices.

      Language and Superdiversity
    • In accounts of ethnographic fieldwork and textbooks on ethnography, we often find the notion of rapport used to describe social relationships in the field. Frequently, rapport between researcher and researched is invoked as a prerequisite to be achieved before fieldwork can start, or used as evidence to judge the value and robustness of an ethnography. With few exceptions, and despite regular pleas to do so, ethnographers continue to avoid presenting any discursive evidence of what rapport might look like from an interactional perspective. In a sense, the uncritical acceptance of rapport as a fieldwork goal and measure has helped hide the discursive work that goes on in the field. In turn, this has privileged ideas about identity as portable rather than "portable and emergent", and reports of social life as more important than how such reports emerge. Written for all those who engage or plan to engage in ethnographic fieldwork, this collection examines how social relationships dialogically emerge in fieldwork settings.

      Rapport and the discursive co-construction of social relations in fieldwork encounters