Log In
Or create an account ->
Imperial Library
Home
About
News
Upload
Forum
Help
Login/SignUp
Index
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Contents
Contributors
Editors Introduction
Authors Introduction
THE ORIGINAL TEXT
Part I: Language and Woman’s Place
Part II: Why Women Are Ladies
Annotations
COMMENTARIES
Part I: Contexts
1 Changing Places: Language and Woman’s Place in Context
2 “Radical Feminist” as Label, Libel, and Laudatory Chant: The Politics of Theoretical Taxonomies in Feminist Linguistics
3 Positioning Ideas and Gendered Subjects: “Women’s Language” Revisited
4 Language and Woman’s Place: Picking Up the Gauntlet
Part II: Concepts
5 Power, Lady, and Linguistic Politeness in Language and Woman’s Place
6 Cultural Patterning in Language and Woman’s Place
7 The Good Woman
8 Language and Marginalized Places
Part III: Femininities
9 Exploring Women’s Language in Japanese
10 “Women’s Language” and Martha Stewart: From a Room of One’s Own to a Home of One’s Own to a Corporation of One’s Own
11 Public Discourse and the Private Life of Little Girls: Language and Woman’s Place and Language Socialization
12 Mother’s Place in Language and Woman’s Place
Part IV: Power
13 Doing and Saying: Some Words on Women’s Silence
14 Computer-Mediated Communication and Woman’s Place
15 Linguistic Discrimination and Violence against Women: Discursive Practices and Material Effects
16 What Does a Focus on “Men’s Language” Tell Us about Language and Woman’s Place?
Part V: Women’s Places
17 Gender, Identity, and “Strong Language” in a Professional Woman’s Talk
18 The New (and Improved?) Language and Place of Women in Japan
19 “I’m Every Woman”: Black Women’s (Dis) placement in Women’s Language Study
20 The Anguish of Normative Gender: Sociolinguistic Studies among U.S. Latinas
21 Contradictions of the Indigenous Americas: Feminist Challenges to and from the Field
Part VI: Sexualities
22 Language and Woman’s Place: Blueprinting Studies of Gay Men’s English
23 The Way We Wish We Were: Sexuality and Class in Language and Woman’s Place
24 “I Am Woman, Hear Me Roar”: The Importance of Linguistic Stereotype for Lesbian Identity Performances
25 As Much as We Use Language: Lakoff’s Queer Augury
Index
← Prev
Back
Next →
← Prev
Back
Next →