Abstract
How do Māori deaf people use and perceive variable features of New Zealand Sign Language (NZSL) to invoke ethnolinguistic identity? Previous research has documented motivation among Māori deaf people to signal ethnic identity linguistically within and outside the NZSL community (McKee, McKee, Smiler, & Pointon 2007), but how this plays out in situated language practices has not been explored. This study proceeds from Eckert's (2012:98) contention that local ideologies which imbue linguistic variants with social meaning ‘are part of the active—stylistic—production of social differentiation’. With a focus on social meaning, this study combines micro-analysis of two features (pronominal pointing variants, and mouthing with signs) with consideration of metapragmatic data to explore how these features are believed to index ‘Māori deaf’ identity. Usage data and signers’ metalinguistic accounts suggest that these features are deployed to construct Māori identity in particular interactional contexts and roles, rather than indicating ethnicity as a macro-social category in NZSL. (New Zealand Sign Language, Māori deaf, ethnicity, identity, variation)*
Funding
Signs of Development: Sociolinguistic Variation and Change in New Zealand Sign Language in Times of Language Status Change and Globalisation | Funder: Royal Society of New Zealand | Grant ID: 20-VUW-020
History
Preferred citation
Simchowitz, M. & McKee, R. (n.d.). Constructing Māori deaf identity in New Zealand Sign Language. Language in Society, 1-25. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0047404525000077