Apr 18

Linguistics job talk: A Hockey-Based Persona: The Sociolinguistic Impact of Canadian English on American- Born Hockey Players

Thu, April 18, 2024 • 4:00pm - 5:00pm (1h) • Willis 204

Please join the Linguistics Department for a job talk by Andrew Bray, Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Rochester.

This talk presents an analysis of acoustic data taken from sociolinguistic interviews conducted with 20 American-born professional ice hockey players to establish if their speech has been significantly impacted by Canadian English (CanE) due to the historical importance of Canada on the identity of the sport. I evaluate the players’ adoption and usage of CanE vowel variants which are often absent in American English dialects including the Low-Back-Merger Shift, the lowering and retraction of the tongue in BIT, BET, and BAT, triggered by the Low-Back Merger of BOT and BOUGHT, Canadian raising, raising of the tongue in TIGHT and DOUBT before voiceless consonants, and the more monophthongal status of BAIT and BOAT. The results demonstrate that the players produce variants that are largely inexplicable based on their regional dialects alone. Utilizing the framework of indexicality, I argue that the presence of these variants in the players’ speech suggests that they have gained indexical value linked entirely to the sport. This additional value allows hockey players to utilize these variants in the construction of a hockey-based linguistic persona.

from Linguistics

Event Contact: Lisa Falconer

Event Summary

Linguistics job talk: A Hockey-Based Persona: The Sociolinguistic Impact of Canadian English on American- Born Hockey Players
  • Intended For: General Public, Students, Faculty, Staff, Emeriti, Alums, Prospective Students, Families
  • Categories: Lecture/Panel

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