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Informationen zum Autor Fergus O’Dwyer is a lecturer at the Marino Institute of Education (an associated college of Trinity College Dublin), with previous posts in Germany, Ireland, and Japan. Klappentext This book explores the ways in which linguistic variation and complex social practices interact toward the formation of male interactional identities in a sports club in Dublin, illustrating the affordances of studying sporting contexts in contributing to advancing sociolinguistic theory.Adopting a participant-informed ethnographic approach, the book examines both the social interactional contexts within the club and the sociopragmatic and sociophonetic features which contribute to the different performances of masculinity in and outside the club. The volume focuses particularly on the linguistic analysis of humor and its multifunctional uses as a means of establishing solidarity and social ties but also aggression, competitiveness, and status within the social world of this club as well as similar such clubs across Ireland. The book's unique approach is intended to complement and build on existing sociolinguistic studies looking at linguistic variation in groups by supporting quantitative data with ethnographically informed insights to look at social meaning in interaction from micro-, meso-, and macro-levels.This book will be of particular interesting to graduate students and scholars in sociolinguistics, language, gender, and sexuality, and language and identity. Zusammenfassung This book explores the ways in which linguistic variation and complex social practices interact toward the formation of male interactional identities in a sports club in Dublin, illustrating the affordances of studying sporting contexts in contributing to advancing sociolinguistic theory. Inhaltsverzeichnis Chapter 1 Introduction: social meaning and language in Club Fingal 1.1. Identity and language 1.1.1. Overview of identity and language in Dublin 1.2. Broad overview of Dublin 15 and Gaelic games 1.2.1. Dublin 15 1.2.2. Gaelic games 1.3. Overview of research aims, methods and results 1.4. Organization of the book Chapter 2 The ethnographic study of normative masculinity in a sports club 2.1. Gender, masculinity and sports in sociolinguistic research 2.1.1. Identity and sociolinguistics 2.1.2. Gender and masculinity 2.2. Ethnographic data collection decisions 2.2.1. Analytical framework 2.2.1.1. Quantitative Analysis 2.2.1.2. Qualitative Analysis 2.3. Ethnographic profile of Club Fingal 2.3.1. Club Fingal in context 2.3.2. The social aspects of involvement in Club Fingal 2.4. Communication in Club Fingal 2.4.1. Perceptions of Language in Club Fingal 2.4.2. Overview of salient interactional identities and types of talk 2.4.3. Sociolinguistic profile of the types of talk 2.4.4. Observations of humour 2.4.4.1. Direct, straight talk 2.4.4.2. Witticisms 2.4.4.3. Threads of humour 2.5. Preliminary summary of the social space and language of Club Fingal Chapter 3 Sociophonetic analysis of PRICE 3.1. Analysis of PRICE 3.1.1. Analysis of significant predictors 3.1.2. Intraspeaker variation and type of talk 3.1.3. Overall variation of PRICE tokens and type of talk 3.1.4. Salient patterns that emerged from statistical analysis of PRICE tokens 3.2. The discourse functions of lower and retracted PRICE offsets 3.2.1. Inferring a position of knowledge or authority 3.2.2. Quoting other authoritative positions 3.2.3. Asserting authority in a conversation 3.2.4. Other phonetic considerations 3.2.5. Following consonant 3.2.6. Sociolinguistics interpretations of salient patterns 3.3. Summary: PRICE and epistemic status Chapter 4 Sociophonetic analysi...