Sociolinguistic investigation of compliments and compliment responses among young Japanese
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Abstract
This dissertation is a sociolinguistic investigation into the system of
the speech act of complimenting among young Japanese. Sociolinguistic
studies on complimenting have been rather extensively carried out in
Western academic discourse since the 1980s. The rapid development of this
field went hand in hand with the existing growing body of work on speech
acts, linguistic politeness and language and gender studies, all fields which
came to flourish during the 1960s-80s. The speech act of complimenting has
so far been overwhelmingly regarded as one of the most obvious positive
politeness strategies (Brown & Levinson 1987; Holmes 1995) and also as a
feminised sociolinguistic practice (Eckert & McConnell-Ginet 2003; Herbert
1990). However, the sociolinguistic examination of complimenting in non-
Western speech communities remains less well investigated.
This dissertation challenges some traditional premises about the
nature of this speech act and explores how sociolinguists should go about
analysing this variable in the context of a non-Western speech community. In
so doing, I highlight that applying localized cultural knowledge plays a
crucial role in unfolding the social and linguistic systems of complimenting
in a Japanese speech community.
The analysis presented here draws on a corpus consisting of more
than 40 hours of recordings with 67 young Japanese university students,
collected through ethnographic techniques. Fieldwork was conducted for
over a year in order to obtain these data in southern Japan (namely,
Kumamoto and Oita prefectures). A total of 369 compliment utterances
within 143 compliment sequences were extracted and transcribed from this
corpus.
To achieve a satisfying sociolinguistic understanding of this speech
act, the data are analysed with a combination of both the qualitative methods
of discourse analysis and the quantitative methods of variationist
sociolinguistics.
This dissertation brings much needed discussions of this variable
situated within non-Western contexts and hence makes significant
contribution to the field, by adding new perspectives and findings about
complimenting behaviour. On the one hand, my work found some regularity
in compliments which parallel the findings of previous studies. This itself is a
new insight in the field of compliments studies, namely, that there are crossculturally
(if not universally) pervasive properties of complimenting. On the
other hand, this study highlighted some originality in this speech act among
the young Japanese. The construction and application of compliments in the
case of Japanese substantially manifest its complex and intricate
sociolinguistic system, which my dissertation is dedicated to describing
through the naturally occurring data of spoken Japanese.
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