Over the past few decades, sociolinguists have begun to take greater interest in how public figures, such as politicians, may employ variation at different levels of linguistic structure in the construction of a public persona. These figures are of particular interest because their public and constructed usages may also illuminate wider social usages and indices of specific linguistic variables. This article presents results from analyses of multiple aspects of ethnolinguistic variation in the speech of Vice President Kamala Harris during the 2019–20 Democratic Party primary debates. In particular, it focuses on her use of selected morphosyntactic features associated with African American Language, vowel systems associated with California and African American identities, and topic-based differences in the use of selected prosodic variables. Together, these results show how Harris selectively employs both enregistered and subtle linguistic variables in the establishment of a highly specific sociolinguistic identity that comports with her unique positions politically, socially, and racially. The results of this study expand our knowledge about how the complexities of speaker identity are reflected in sociolinguistic variation, while further illuminating how speakers in the public sphere use variation to reflect and construct both who they are and who we want them to be.
Complex Variation in the Construction of a Sociolinguistic Persona: The Case of Vice President Kamala Harris
nicole holliday is an assistant professor in the Department of Linguistics and Cognitive Science at Pomona College in Claremont, California. Her work focuses on sociophonetic variation, especially in the domain of prosody. She is especially interested in how speakers and listeners use phonetic information to do identity work. Her work has appeared in venues such as the Journal of Sociolinguistics, Laboratory Phonology, Language Variation and Change, and Interspeech. Email: [email protected].
Nicole Holliday; Complex Variation in the Construction of a Sociolinguistic Persona: The Case of Vice President Kamala Harris. American Speech 1 May 2024; 99 (2): 135–166. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00031283-10867240
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