This Element documents the evolution of a research program that began in the early 1960s with the author's first investigation of language change on Martha's Vineyard. It traces the development of what has become the basic framework for studying language variation and change. Interviews with strangers are the backbone of this research: the ten American English speakers appearing here were all strangers to the interviewer at the time. They were selected as among the most memorable, from thousands of interviews across six decades. The speakers express their ideas and concerns in the language of everyday life, dealing with their way of earning a living, getting along with neighbors, raising a family - all  matters in which their language serves them well. These people speak for themselves. And you will hear their voices. What they have to say is a monument to the richness and variety of the American vernacular, offering a tour of the studies that have built the field of sociolinguistics.
You'll find that, if you're doing it right, you never stop being a work in progress. After countless conversations on conversations, I am no longer a stranger within my own skin.
It was a phrase that my daughter wrote on a birthday card that inspired this book. She said, "I was a seasoned conversationalist with perfect strangers." I thought how true this was and started to...
Sicilian-American Women's, Men's, and Family Studies Professor, psychoanalyst, and night radio talk show personality, Anna Falco's dad always told her that the lower our self esteem, the more we want...
This is a book of nothing. Or is it? Poet P.W. Stowers experienced extreme tragedy in his life following a traumatic motorcycle accident. He embraced alcohol as his only escape from the pain of...