Working assumptions about what constitutes authenticity in language are crucially informed by prevailing notions of continuity and change. This preoccupation is central to questions of identity for language speakers. It is also central to the discipline of linguistics. Our experience of working alongside community members on language projects has raised our awareness of the degree of disjunction between ideas of authenticity commonly assumed within linguistics and the ideas we encounter within speech communities. In this article, we investigate types of continuity embraced by different stakeholders in language and language development. We trace the continuity narratives in two different language situations, identifying types of lineage, participant positions, and their relevance to notions of authenticity. We then examine the criteria for authenticity and lineage within linguistics, noting the disjunctions internal to the field, depending on the analyst's theoretical perspective, as well the disjunctions between lineages of authenticity as narrated within the discipline and those narrated in the wider community. Our aim is to develop a working model of language that recognizes and accommodates multiple narratives of authenticity, thereby better accommodating the full range of language and language research situations. This may in turn contribute to more productive collaborative relationships between communities and consultant linguists.
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedAuthenticities and lineages: revisiting concepts of continuity and change in languageLicensedMarch 17, 2008
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedWhich self? Pronominal choice, modernity, and self-categorizationsLicensedMarch 17, 2008
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedAttitudes to western loanwords in IndonesianLicensedMarch 17, 2008
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedMinority language use in Cameroon and educated indigenes' attitude to their languagesLicensedMarch 17, 2008
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedLanguage maintenance among “fortunate immigrants”: The French in the United States and Americans in FranceLicensedMarch 17, 2008
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedLanguage use in interlingual families: Do different languages make a difference?LicensedMarch 17, 2008
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedEffects of cultural background of college students on apology strategiesLicensedMarch 17, 2008
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedLanguage contact in South AmericaLicensedMarch 17, 2008