A bibliography of fieldwork in the ethnography of communication
- 1 September 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Language in Society
- Vol. 15 (3) , 387-397
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0047404500011829
Abstract
In 1962, Dell Hymes proposed the project he subsequently named the ethnography of communication (Hymes1961, 1962, 1964b). Its central motive was to create a theory of linguistic communication which is grounded in the comparative analysis of many communities and their distinctive ways of speaking. Just as there is a comparative politics, law, religion, and so forth, he said, so should there be a comparative analysis of “studies ethnographic in basis and communicative in scope” (Hymes1964b:9). Such studies would be “whole ethnographies focused on communicative behavior” (1964b:9) and would be guided by, and subsequently used to guide the revision of, a descriptive framework which itself is a model of sociolinguistic description.Keywords
This publication has 100 references indexed in Scilit:
- Language style as audience designLanguage in Society, 1984
- Questions for the ethnographer: A critical examination of the role of the interview in fieldworkSemiotica, 1983
- Talking to children in Western SamoaLanguage in Society, 1982
- Speech events of the Aboriginal classroomInternational Journal of the Sociology of Language, 1982
- Speech Acts in GuyanaJournal of Black Studies, 1979
- Dialect and conversational inference in urban communicationLanguage in Society, 1978
- The Ethnography of SpeakingAnnual Review of Anthropology, 1975
- A Western Apache Writing System: The Symbols of Silas JohnScience, 1973
- Aspects of Luo SocializationLanguage in Society, 1972
- Introduction: Toward Ethnographies of Communication1American Anthropologist, 1964