Urciuoli's award-winning book explores how language and the social construction of race, class, and ethnicity shape the lives of working-class Puerto Ricans living in New York City. Her reflexive ethnographic study is a combination of two absorbing features: her analyses of language and power relations based on key principles in semiotic and linguistic anthropology, paired with the authentic voices of individuals who share their lived experiences of speaking Spanish and English.
The subjects' conversations, interview responses, and anecdotes are saturated with ideas about what "correct" English means to them. Through these extended transcripts readers gain insight about language's role in cultural dynamics that tangle minority populations in challenges, such as limiting where individuals and families live and work. Urciuoli's provocative research and fieldwork give readers a rich understanding of language as the domain in which racial, ethnic, and class hierarchies are experienced.
Contents: Introduction: The Semiotics of Exclusion / 1. Racialization and Language / 2. Visions of Disorder: How Puerto Ricans Became Racialized / 3. The Political Topography of Bilingualism / 4. Good English as Symbolic Capital / 5. The Race/Class/Language Map
"Urciuoli's book is theoretically deep, extensively documented, and analytically on target. Her views on the intersection of language, race, and class are applicable to many communities. A must read for students of linguistic prejudice." --Ana Celia Zentella, University of California, San Diego
"[Urciuoli] builds an extensive interpretative and systematic map of language constructions from her sources in different urban contexts in terms of their class, prejudices, everyday experiences, education, and bilingualism.... The subjects who generate daily life are presented in the fairest manner that is, in their complete humanity." --American Ethnologist
"The analytical framework, which combines social theory, linguistics, and semiotics, is carefully laid out and the generous amount of linguistic data reported (with Spanish and English transcripts provided), much of which is eloquent and emotionally charged, stimulates wide-ranging discussion." --Journal of Linguistic Anthropology
"... revelatory about the growing concern with the study of power in the field of linguistic anthropology... wonderfully reflexive not only about the politics of language but also about the politics of research, specifically of being a white woman studying working-class Puerto Rican language." --American Anthropologist