Girls going global, boys heading home? On the interplay between place, everyday mobility, linguistic practice and gender in rural and urban Denmark.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Conference abstract for conference › Research › peer-review
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Girls going global, boys heading home? On the interplay between place, everyday mobility, linguistic practice and gender in rural and urban Denmark. . / Skovse, Astrid Ravn.
2015. Abstract from The Sociolinguistics of Globalization, Hong Kong, Hong Kong.Research output: Contribution to conference › Conference abstract for conference › Research › peer-review
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TY - ABST
T1 - Girls going global, boys heading home?
AU - Skovse, Astrid Ravn
PY - 2015/6/3
Y1 - 2015/6/3
N2 - In a globalised world, differences in mobility practice matter substantially in reference to e.g. educational opportunities and career prospects. Young Danes differ with regard to their degree of geographical and socio-economical mobility as more women than men move to the cities to study.Does such a difference in mobility practice show, however, as early as in primary school? Is there a gender component to how adolescents make use of, conceptualise and relate to their local place and to how they linguistically index the local (Johnstone 2010b)? This study examines the intricate relationship between everyday mobility, place, linguistic practice and gender among adolescents in two very different Danish settings: a rural, mono-ethnic village, Bylderup, and an urban, poly-ethnic residential area, Vollsmose. In Bylderup, the use of local dialect is prevalent, whereas in Vollsmose, regional dialect seems to coexist with poly-ethnic language styles. Data are obtained through participant observation, sociolinguistic interviews, questionnaires, and peer group recordings.
AB - In a globalised world, differences in mobility practice matter substantially in reference to e.g. educational opportunities and career prospects. Young Danes differ with regard to their degree of geographical and socio-economical mobility as more women than men move to the cities to study.Does such a difference in mobility practice show, however, as early as in primary school? Is there a gender component to how adolescents make use of, conceptualise and relate to their local place and to how they linguistically index the local (Johnstone 2010b)? This study examines the intricate relationship between everyday mobility, place, linguistic practice and gender among adolescents in two very different Danish settings: a rural, mono-ethnic village, Bylderup, and an urban, poly-ethnic residential area, Vollsmose. In Bylderup, the use of local dialect is prevalent, whereas in Vollsmose, regional dialect seems to coexist with poly-ethnic language styles. Data are obtained through participant observation, sociolinguistic interviews, questionnaires, and peer group recordings.
KW - Faculty of Humanities
KW - Youth language
KW - Mobility
KW - Place
M3 - Conference abstract for conference
Y2 - 3 June 2015 through 6 June 2015
ER -
ID: 156583145