The power of slurs in reported speech: A survey-based study of native speaker intuitions
(2021) SPVR01 20211English Studies
Master's Programme: Language and Linguistics
- Abstract
- When slurs are used in indirect reports (e.g., ‘Lisa said that Tom is a [slur]’), there is a disagreement between theories of language about which speaker is responsible for the derogatory content and offensive potential of the slur — the original speaker or the reporting speaker. This debate is specific to slurs and does not typically extend to non-slur pejoratives. To examine this issue, this thesis compares native English speaker intuitions about the offensiveness of slurs, neutral counterparts, and non-slur pejoratives in isolation, indirect reports, and predicative utterances. These intuitions were elicited in two internet-based surveys. Questions asked by the study concern the offensiveness of slurs in predicative utterances versus... (More)
- When slurs are used in indirect reports (e.g., ‘Lisa said that Tom is a [slur]’), there is a disagreement between theories of language about which speaker is responsible for the derogatory content and offensive potential of the slur — the original speaker or the reporting speaker. This debate is specific to slurs and does not typically extend to non-slur pejoratives. To examine this issue, this thesis compares native English speaker intuitions about the offensiveness of slurs, neutral counterparts, and non-slur pejoratives in isolation, indirect reports, and predicative utterances. These intuitions were elicited in two internet-based surveys. Questions asked by the study concern the offensiveness of slurs in predicative utterances versus indirect reports, the differences and/or similarities of slurs and non-slur pejoratives in these same contexts, and the compatibility of selected slur theories with the results of the surveys. Results show that while offensive, slurs in indirect reports are less offensive than slurs in predicative utterances. Results also show that non-slur pejoratives are less offensive than slurs in all conditions, and that the difference between reported non-slur pejoratives and predicative non-slur pejoratives is substantially smaller than the difference between reported and predicative slurs. Therefore, the results contradict theories which attribute offensiveness to the original speaker, and are somewhat compatible with other theories. In the future, research that is better equipped to test for differences in context can further examine the predictive value of such theories. Moreover, the study suggests that most prominent slur theories face issues in explaining the varying degrees of offensiveness found in the judgments of reported slurs. I posit that this issue requires more extensive examination and analysis to fully explore. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/9068084
- author
- Melckersson, Jennifer LU
- supervisor
- organization
- course
- SPVR01 20211
- year
- 2021
- type
- H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
- subject
- keywords
- slurs, pejoratives, indirect reports, reported speech, offensiveness, native speaker intuition
- language
- English
- id
- 9068084
- date added to LUP
- 2021-11-15 16:02:34
- date last changed
- 2021-11-15 16:02:34
@misc{9068084, abstract = {{When slurs are used in indirect reports (e.g., ‘Lisa said that Tom is a [slur]’), there is a disagreement between theories of language about which speaker is responsible for the derogatory content and offensive potential of the slur — the original speaker or the reporting speaker. This debate is specific to slurs and does not typically extend to non-slur pejoratives. To examine this issue, this thesis compares native English speaker intuitions about the offensiveness of slurs, neutral counterparts, and non-slur pejoratives in isolation, indirect reports, and predicative utterances. These intuitions were elicited in two internet-based surveys. Questions asked by the study concern the offensiveness of slurs in predicative utterances versus indirect reports, the differences and/or similarities of slurs and non-slur pejoratives in these same contexts, and the compatibility of selected slur theories with the results of the surveys. Results show that while offensive, slurs in indirect reports are less offensive than slurs in predicative utterances. Results also show that non-slur pejoratives are less offensive than slurs in all conditions, and that the difference between reported non-slur pejoratives and predicative non-slur pejoratives is substantially smaller than the difference between reported and predicative slurs. Therefore, the results contradict theories which attribute offensiveness to the original speaker, and are somewhat compatible with other theories. In the future, research that is better equipped to test for differences in context can further examine the predictive value of such theories. Moreover, the study suggests that most prominent slur theories face issues in explaining the varying degrees of offensiveness found in the judgments of reported slurs. I posit that this issue requires more extensive examination and analysis to fully explore.}}, author = {{Melckersson, Jennifer}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{The power of slurs in reported speech: A survey-based study of native speaker intuitions}}, year = {{2021}}, }