I know, 'cos I was there: how residence abroad students use personal experience to legitimate cultural generalisations.

Tusting, Karin and Crawshaw, R. and Callen, B. (2002) I know, 'cos I was there: how residence abroad students use personal experience to legitimate cultural generalisations. Discourse and Society, 13 (5). pp. 651-672. ISSN 0957-9265

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Abstract

This article examines the discursive construction of cultural generalizations, by analysing generalizations about gender and culture made in a large corpus of diary, focus group and interview data produced by modern languages students at university in Britain during or shortly after their period of residence abroad. It is argued that although students demonstrate an awareness of the negative cultural evaluation of stereotyping through the use of mitigation strategies, they are nevertheless willing to produce generalizations under the right discursive conditions, particularly when permission is given by the other participants in the interaction and when they are able to produce evidence to legitimate the generalization in some way. Analysis of the entire corpus shows that the most common form of legitimation is the appeal to personal experience, whereas close analysis of extracts from the data demonstrates the importance of discursive context and process in making such generalizations possible and acceptable.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Discourse and Society
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/3300/3315
Subjects:
?? gender • intercultural communication • legitimations • residence abroad • stereotypescommunicationsociology and political sciencep philology. linguistics ??
ID Code:
1499
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
13 Feb 2008 09:42
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
15 Jul 2024 09:34