White Australian hip-hop artist Iggy Azalea has been the subject of recent criticism forher use of African American English (AAE). Eberhardt and Freeman (2015) demonstratethat Iggy, a native speaker of Australian English who uses Australian English in all of herpublic speech, makes consistent and context-sensitive use of AAE throughout her entirediscography. In order to account for this unique behavior, Eberhardt and Freeman use thetheoretical notion of linguistic appropriation (Hill 2008) which describes the powerimbalance evident when outgroup members (e.g. Iggy) benefit from the use of certainvarieties of speech that ingroup members (e.g. speakers of AAE) are stigmatized forusing. Drawing on their research, this study explores Iggy’s lin...
This thesis investigates the morphosyntactic and lexical features of African American Vernacular Eng...
Addresses the issue of linguistic discrimination in educational settings with specific focus on Afri...
Proceedings of the 37th Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (2013), pp. 449-46
White Australian hip-hop artist Iggy Azalea has been the subject of recent criticism forher use of A...
This article sets out to explain how language shapes identity and how the cultural and political imp...
This purpose of this study was to analyze perceptions of cultural appropriation in hiphop, comparing...
Iggy Azalea isn’t the first artist to profit from a entertainment persona that differs from her “rea...
By looking at the positioning of race within hip-hop music alongside its social construction of auth...
This work explores America\u27s love-hate relationship with African American English (AAE). As Lingu...
While there is well documented evidence of certain supra-regional features in African American Engli...
African-American Vernacular English (AAVE), Black English Vernacular (BEV), or Ebonics, is a social ...
This project seeks to understand how African American Vernacular English (AAVE) effects the experien...
It is known that listeners map speakers’ voices to racial categories and that such identification ca...
Survey research in Atlanta suggests that the usual national generalizations about race and language ...
In this paper, I show the usage of African American Vernacular and the elements that make up the ver...
This thesis investigates the morphosyntactic and lexical features of African American Vernacular Eng...
Addresses the issue of linguistic discrimination in educational settings with specific focus on Afri...
Proceedings of the 37th Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (2013), pp. 449-46
White Australian hip-hop artist Iggy Azalea has been the subject of recent criticism forher use of A...
This article sets out to explain how language shapes identity and how the cultural and political imp...
This purpose of this study was to analyze perceptions of cultural appropriation in hiphop, comparing...
Iggy Azalea isn’t the first artist to profit from a entertainment persona that differs from her “rea...
By looking at the positioning of race within hip-hop music alongside its social construction of auth...
This work explores America\u27s love-hate relationship with African American English (AAE). As Lingu...
While there is well documented evidence of certain supra-regional features in African American Engli...
African-American Vernacular English (AAVE), Black English Vernacular (BEV), or Ebonics, is a social ...
This project seeks to understand how African American Vernacular English (AAVE) effects the experien...
It is known that listeners map speakers’ voices to racial categories and that such identification ca...
Survey research in Atlanta suggests that the usual national generalizations about race and language ...
In this paper, I show the usage of African American Vernacular and the elements that make up the ver...
This thesis investigates the morphosyntactic and lexical features of African American Vernacular Eng...
Addresses the issue of linguistic discrimination in educational settings with specific focus on Afri...
Proceedings of the 37th Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (2013), pp. 449-46