articleAnnual Review of AnthropologyJul 2, 2012Closed access

Three Waves of Variation Study: The Emergence of Meaning in the Study of Sociolinguistic Variation

Stanford University

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

The treatment of social meaning in sociolinguistic variation has come in three waves of analytic practice. The first wave of variation studies established broad correlations between linguistic variables and the macrosociological categories of socioeconomic class, gender, ethnicity, and age. The second wave employed ethnographic methods to explore the local categories and configurations that inhabit, or constitute, these broader categories. In both waves, variation was seen as marking social categories. This article sets out a theoretical foundation for the third wave, arguing that (a) variation constitutes a robust social semiotic system, potentially expressing the full range of social concerns in a given…

Citation impact

1,888
total citations
FWCI
209.67
Percentile
100%
References
63
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Variation (astronomy)
  • Meaning (existential)
  • Sociology
  • Linguistics
  • Sociolinguistics
  • Semiotics
  • Context (archaeology)
  • Social class
No related works found for this paper.