Abstract
This article posits that “passing” is a manipulation of ambiguously embodied characteristics, linguistic practice, and ratification by other speakers. I explore discourses and practices of “passing” by post-migrant generation, diasporically-resident Moroccans who seek to be unmarked by migration when bargaining in Moroccan markets. Their attempts have many possibilities for failure, including any way that their diasporic provenance might be made relevant in interaction through their embodied and linguistic practices. This connection between embodiment and linguistic practices becomes more evident in a unique case of bargaining “success”, which depends on using silence. Framed by all the possible ways to fail, the main interactional example is exceptional because of its success-by-not-failing: the diasporically-resident participant was not conversationally, explicitly marked as “diasporic”.
Transcription conventions
Transcription conventions (following Conversation Analysis methods; see Schegloff 2007)
- Xx
Inaudible
- ?
Intense rising intonation
- ,
Slight rising intonation
- .
Intense falling intonation
- /
Slight falling intonation
- :
Elongated vowel or geminated consonant
- Bold
Emphasis
- [
Overlap
- (),(1.2)
Brief pause, pause timed in seconds
- .hhh/hhh
Outbreath/inbreath
- (())
Explanatory or descriptive remark
- <___>
Uncertain transcription
- normal
Darija
- italic
French
- _____*
Usage error
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©2015 by De Gruyter Mouton
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- The Impact of Host Family Relations and Length of Stay on Adolescent Identity Expression during Study Abroad
- Using Silence to “Pass”: Embodiment and Interactional Categorization in a Diasporic Context
- Sleepless in Seoul: Neoliberalism, English fever, and linguistic insecurity among Korean interpreters
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- The Impact of Host Family Relations and Length of Stay on Adolescent Identity Expression during Study Abroad
- Using Silence to “Pass”: Embodiment and Interactional Categorization in a Diasporic Context
- Sleepless in Seoul: Neoliberalism, English fever, and linguistic insecurity among Korean interpreters