Alexandra Jaffe
California State University, Long Beach
43 Papers
177 Citations
Alexandra Jaffe is an academic researcher from California State University, Long Beach. The author has contributed to research in topics: Corsican & Sociolinguistics. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 43 publications. Previous affiliations of Alexandra Jaffe include California State University & State University of New York at Cortland.
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Papers
Ideologies in Action: Language Politics on Corsica
Alexandra Jaffe
- 31 Jan 1999
TL;DR: The authors explored the complex interrelationship between linguistic ideologies and practices on the French island of Corsica and found that dominant language ideologies are inscribed in the everyday experience of ordinary people, as well as how they shape the evolving strategies of language planners trying to revitalize the Corsican language.
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•Book
Stance: Sociolinguistic Perspectives
Alexandra Jaffe
- 04 Jun 2009
TL;DR: The sociolinguistics of stance, style, and the Linguistic Individual have been studied by Jaffe and Johnstone as mentioned in this paper, with a focus on gender, interaction and indexicality in Mexican Immigrant youth slang.
Sociolinguistics from the Periphery: Small Languages in New Circumstances
Sari Pietikäinen,Alexandra Jaffe,Helen Kelly-Holmes,Nikolas Coupland +3 more
- 01 May 2016
TL;DR: Four small-scale, local branding activities exemplify the kinds of shifts that brought the four of us to the writing of this book, reflecting both new sociolinguistic developments and an increasingly reflexive stance towards language and culture.
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Defining the new speaker: theoretical perspectives and learner trajectories
TL;DR: In this paper, the concept of the new speaker is addressed from both a theoretical/definitional perspective and from the standpoint of a situated, ethnographic analysis. But the focus is on Corsican adult language classrooms, where the term "new speaker" itself is not in circulation, but is a target of language planning strategies.
152
Minority Language Movements
Alexandra Jaffe
- 01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: The authors examined the impact of language domination on minority language practice and ideology, and crucially, on the discourses and practices that arise out of minority language revitalization movements that attempt to counteract language domination and dominant language ideologies by turning dominant language ideology against the dominant group which invented them in the first place.
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