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Cited 2 time in webofscience Cited 2 time in scopus
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?Call me by my name?: Names, address, and the subjectivization of Korean women

Authors
Milak, E[Milak, Eldin]
Issue Date
Jul-2022
Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Keywords
Names; Address; Subjectivization; Women; South Korea
Citation
LANGUAGE & COMMUNICATION, v.85, pp.1 - 13
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
LANGUAGE & COMMUNICATION
Volume
85
Start Page
1
End Page
13
URI
https://scholarx.skku.edu/handle/2021.sw.skku/97791
DOI
10.1016/j.langcom.2022.04.002
ISSN
0271-5309
Abstract
Personal names in South Korea are subject to avoidance and restrictions in use grounded in the asymmetric relations of power and age that constitute the sociolinguistic ideologies of the country. At the same time, as lexical items which are inherently and conventionally referential, names have the unique reformational power to change normative social practice. The affordances provided by the dual status of names allow speakers to (re) negotiate relational parameters and reposition themselves as subjects in the wider spatiotemporal setting. The focus on female speakers reveals internal tensions between names and restricted forms of address in familial settings, where the selection and usage of names is interpreted as movement of Korean women towards subject positions on both micro-interactional and macro-social scales.
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